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Wed, 26 Apr 2006 19:13:32 -0400

[sSRI-Research] Truehope: Vitamin Cure

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.discover.com/issues/may-05/features/vitamin-cure/

 

 

Vitamin Cure

 

Can common nutrients curb violent tendencies and dispel clinical

depression?

 

By Susan Freinkel

Photography by Dan Winters

 

DISCOVER Vol. 26 No. 05 | May 2005 | Biology & Medicine

 

When pigs are penned in close quarters, some become so irritable they

savage their pen mates' ears and tails, a problem farmers call

ear-and-tail-biting syndrome. David Hardy, a Canadian hog-feed

salesman from the farmlands of southern Alberta, knew that behavior

well. Years of experience had taught him something else: All it takes

to calm disturbed pigs down is a good dose of vitamins and minerals in

their feed.

 

That came to Hardy's mind one November evening in 1995 when an

acquaintance, Tony Stephan, began confiding his troubles. His wife,

Deborah, had killed herself the year before after struggling with

manic depression and losing her father to suicide. Now two of his 10

children seemed headed down the same road: Twenty-two-year-old Autumn

was in a psychiatric hospital and 15-year-old Joseph had become angry

and aggressive. He had been diagnosed as bipolar, a term for manic

depression, but even with medication he was prone to outbursts so

violent that the rest of the family feared for their lives.

 

The boy's irritability sounded familiar to Hardy. I don't know a whole

lot about mental illness, Hardy told Stephan, but I've seen similar

behavior in the hog barn, and it's easy to cure.

 

So the two men set out to create a human version of Hardy's pig

formula. They bought bottles of vitamins and minerals from local

health-food stores and spent nights at Stephan's kitchen table

concocting a mixture. On January 20, 1996, they gave Joseph the first

bitter-tasting dose. Within a few days, Joseph felt better than he had

in months. After 30 days, all the symptoms of his illness were gone.

 

Stephan next turned to Autumn, whose mental state had been steadily

deteriorating for years. Now she was psychotic, convinced she had a

gaping hole in her chest from which demons emerged. Just released from

the hospital where she'd been on suicide watch, Autumn required

24-hour supervision to ensure she didn't hurt either herself or her

3-year-old son.

 

Stephan forced her to take the nutritional formula. After just two

days of treatment, her rapid swings between mania and depression

stopped. After four days her hallucinations vanished. " I remember

saying, 'Oh my gosh, my hole is gone,' " she recalls. By week's end,

she felt well enough to quit all but one of her five medications.

 

Nine years later, both Autumn and Joseph remain symptom free,

medication free, and devoted to taking what they call " the nutrients "

each day. Autumn Stringam, her married name, is an articulate woman

with bright eyes who revels in being a full-time mother to her son and

the three daughters she's had since getting well. " I don't feel I'm

cured, " she says. " I feel I've got something that allows me to manage

and have a normal, functional life-maybe even better than functional. "

 

It's easy to write off the Stephans' treatment as just one more

crackpot cure in a field rife with fraud and false hope. The

supplement they took has yet to be proved in large clinical trials,

while scientists who have studied it have been caught in the cross

fire between converts, willing to take the supplement on faith and

anecdotal evidence alone, and skeptics who look askance at all

alternative medicine. Yet the idea of treating mental disorders with

supplements makes sense, experts in the field say. Micronutrients help

build and sustain the brain's architecture and fuel its biochemistry.

They are critical in countless ways to the working of cells throughout

the body, including the brain. " We need 40 essential micronutrients in

our diet-vitamins, minerals, and essential fatty acids, " says Bruce

Ames, a biochemist at the Children's Hospital Oakland Research

Institute. Ames has explored the impact of zinc and iron on brain

cells. " If you don't have enough of one, you're fouling up your

biochemistry. "

 

A number of diseases caused by nutrient deficiency, such as scurvy,

beriberi, pellagra, and pernicious anemia, display psychiatric

symptoms like irritability and depression. But while severe

deficiencies are rare in the developed world-when's the last time you

met someone with beriberi?-many of us fall short of getting all the

nutrients we need. In 1997 a British study compared the mineral

content of fruits and vegetables grown in the 1930s with the mineral

content of produce grown in the 1980s. It found that several nutrients

had dropped dramatically, including calcium (down nearly 30 percent),

iron (down 32 percent), and magnesium (down 21 percent).

 

Some researchers suspect that even mild deficiencies can affect the

psyche long before any physical symptoms appear. Stephen Schoenthaler,

a sociologist at California State University at Stanislaus, has been

exploring the link between nutrients and mental health by giving basic

vitamin and mineral supplements to prison inmates and juvenile

detainees. Again and again, since the early 1980s, Schoenthaler has

found that when inmate nutrition improves, the number of fights,

infractions, and other antisocial behavior drops by about 40 percent.

In each case, he has found, the calmer atmosphere can be traced to the

mellower moods of just a few hotheads. The inmates most likely to

throw a punch, he has discovered, are the ones with the least

nutritious diets and the lowest levels of critical nutrients.

 

Schoenthaler's findings have been undermined by less than sterling

research methods: His papers have failed to describe the precise

methods by which he analyzed the inmates' blood. (In January, a

committee at his university recommended that he be suspended for a

semester without pay for academic and scientific misconduct in later,

unrelated research.) So in the late 1990s, an Oxford University

physiologist named Bernard Gesch decided to put the theories to a more

rigorous test. Gesch divided 231 prisoners in one of Britain's

toughest prisons into two groups. Half were given a standard vitamin

and mineral supplement each day as well as fish-oil capsules and

omega-6 oil from evening primrose. The other half received placebos.

The results, published in 2002 in The British Journal of Psychiatry,

drew headlines on both sides of the Atlantic. They were also almost

identical to Schoenthaler's. Over the course of approximately nine

months, inmates taking supplements committed about 35 percent fewer

antisocial acts than the group taking placebos. A few weeks after the

study started, the prison warden told Gesch that the administrative

report that month showed no violent incidents had occurred. " As far as

he was aware, this had never happened in the history of the

institution, " Gesch says.

 

Poor Man's Pharmacopoeia

 

A number of common nutrients may help alleviate mental illness when

taken in higher-than-normal doses. A few of the most promising

candidates follow.

 

FOLIC ACID

Folic acid is a B vitamin essential to mood regulation and the

development of the nervous system. Patients deficient in it appear to

respond poorly to antidepressants. In one 2000 British study, 127

patients taking Prozac were also given either 500 micrograms of folic

acid a day or a placebo. The folic acid group did significantly

better, in particular the women, 94 percent of whom improved compared

with 61 percent in the placebo group.

 

MAGNESIUM

It's long been known that magnesium can act as a sedative. Some

studies have also found magnesium deficiencies in patients with

depression, although the evidence is inconsistent. The mineral may

help other mood-stabilizing drugs work better. Researchers at the

Chemical Abuse Centers in Boardman, Ohio, found that combining

magnesium oxide with the drug verapamil helped control manic symptoms

in patients better than a drug-placebo combination.

 

CHROMIUM

Several studies have suggested that chromium picolinate may help

alleviate depression and improve the response to antidepressants. In

one small trial at Duke University, 70 percent of the patients who

were given chromium picolinate improved, while none of those given

placebos got better.

 

INOSITOL

This sugar molecule appears to make the brain's receptors more

sensitive to serotonin, one of the chemical messengers that mediate

mood. In a series of short-term placebo-controlled trials, researchers

at Ben Gurion University of the Negev in Israel found that large doses

of inositol-12 to 18 grams a day-helped alleviate depression, panic

disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

 

The study of micronutrients and mental health is known as

orthomolecular psychiatry, a term coined by two-time Nobel laureate

Linus Pauling in a controversial 1968 essay. Pauling wrote that

nutritional supplements, unlike psychotherapy or drugs, represent a

way to provide " the optimum molecular environment for the mind. "

Varying the concentrations of substances normally present in the human

body, he wrote, may control mental disease even better than

conventional treatments.

 

Today the Society for Orthomolecular Health Medicine counts about 200

American members. One of the foremost practitioners, the Canadian

psychiatrist Abram Hoffer, claims to have successfully treated

thousands of schizophrenics with massive doses of vitamin C and

niacin. He contends the vitamins neutralize an oxidized compound that

causes hallucinations when it accumulates in the brains of patients.

Until recently, such treatments thrived on the power of patient lore,

not scientific certainty. Nutritional therapists were generally

unwilling to test their claims in well-designed controlled studies.

" Even when studies were done, they just didn't meet the standards of

rigor that would make them be taken seriously, " says Charles Popper, a

Harvard University psychopharmacologist who studies bipolar disorder.

 

In 1973 a task force of the American Psychiatric Association issued a

withering indictment of orthomolecular psychiatry, concluding that

" the credibility of the megavitamin proponents is low. " For the next

two decades, funding for orthomolecular research was rare. Academia

turned its back on the field, and industry saw no profit in

it-vitamins and minerals can't be patented like other medicines. In

recent years, however, grants from the National Center for

Complementary and Alternative Medicine, founded in 1998, and new

discoveries in brain biochemistry have prompted researchers to take a

second look at nutritional therapies. The strongest evidence to date

involves omega-3 fatty acids, a group of compounds abundant in fish

oil of the kind Gesch gave to prisoners, as well as in the membranes

of and synapses between brain cells. In a landmark 1999 study, Harvard

psychiatrist Andrew Stoll found that bipolar patients who were given

large doses of omega-3s did significantly better and resisted relapse

longer than a matched group of patients who were given placebos.

 

Stoll's findings have yet to be replicated, but other researchers have

since studied omega-3s as a treatment for depression, schizophrenia,

borderline personality disorder, and attention deficit hyperactivity

disorder, or ADHD. (See " Fish Therapy, " opposite page.) " In every

case, the data has been overwhelmingly positive, " Stoll says. Other

research has shown correlations between low levels of various

nutrients-zinc, calcium, magnesium, and B vitamins-and depression.

Researchers have found that anywhere from 15 percent to 38 percent of

psychiatric patients have reduced levels of folate. A 2000 study of

older women found that 17 percent of those who were mildly depressed

and 27 percent of those suffering severe depression were short on

vitamin B12.

 

In an effort to winnow out confounding variables, nutritional research

has long focused on single nutrients. Yet some researchers, like

Stoll, have suggested that the effects of nutrients are additive-that

their real strength becomes apparent only in a multinutrient formula.

A formula much like the one that Tony Stephan and David Hardy first

stumbled upon in a hog barn.

 

FISH THERAPY

 

Omega-3s are a family of fatty acids found in seafood and certain

plants such as flax. Researchers are interested in their therapeutic

potential for several reasons: Large population studies have shown a

correlation between rates of seafood consumption and depression. Small

studies have found patients with depression have reduced levels of

these fatty acids in their blood. A variety of small clinical trials

have also suggested that omega-3s (at doses ranging from one to four

grams) may alleviate the symptoms of depression, schizophrenia, and

bipolar disorder, as well as improve patients' response to

conventional medicines.

 

Some researchers speculate that fatty acids help maintain fluidity in

the cellular membranes, allowing neural receptors to better detect

incoming signals. Others, like Harvard psychiatrist Andrew Stoll,

believe that omega-3s affect the brain in ways similar to

mood-stabilizing drugs like lithium and Depakote: They tamp down

excessive signaling between cells. Stoll says the compounds also

reduce cellular inflammation-common in people with mental

disorders-stirred up by omega-6s, another family of fatty acids. In

centuries past, humans ate a great deal of wild game, greens, and

other foods rich in omega-3s. Today we eat fewer omega-3s, while

filling up on foods heavy with processed vegetable oils, which are

high in omega-6s. The change may help account for the increased

incidence of depression in the past 100 years, Stoll says.

 

Stoll's colleagues say that the compounds show promise but require

further research. " The problem is there's not a lot of published

evidence yet, " says Harvard psychiatrist David Mischoulon. " So it's

hard to compare this modest body of evidence against evidence for a

medication like Prozac or Zoloft that has numerous studies to back it

up. " -S.F.

 

 

After Stephan and Hardy's success, they spread word of the treatment

among fellow Mormons in southern Alberta. They began by whipping up

batches of the formula for church members suffering all sorts of

disorders, from mild depression to ADHD to schizophrenia. Then, in

early 1997, they quit their jobs and began selling the formula, which

they eventually named EMPowerplus (the EM stands for " essential

mineral " ). Their company, Truehope Nutritional Support, employs 35

people in a squat building on the edge of Hardy's hometown, the tiny

farm community of Raymond.

 

Stephan, 52, is stocky and energetic, with blondish-gray hair, earnest

blue eyes, and a nose that skews slightly to the right as if it had

been broken. Hardy, 55, is tall and lean, with square wire-rimmed

glasses. It's not hard to see him as the high school science teacher

he once was. The two relate the story of their supplement with a

practiced air. Both are devout Mormons who seem to believe they've

been given a mission to alleviate mental illness. Although the

supplement is not inexpensive-a month's supply costs $69.98-Stephan

and Hardy say it is expensive to manufacture, and the business barely

turns a profit.

 

For years, they say, they tinkered with the formula, using Autumn as

their guinea pig. " A lot of it was trial and error, " Stephan says.

" There's nothing out there saying that if you're bipolar you need 50

milligrams of zinc. " The latest incarnation of the supplement contains

36 vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and antioxidants. Most are the

same ingredients found in a typical multivitamin but at much higher

doses. For example, a daily dose of the supplement contains a whopping

120 milligrams of vitamin E, six times the recommended daily

allowance. So far, the only side effects appear to be nausea and

diarrhea, but no one really knows the long-term dangers of taking high

vitamin and mineral doses.

 

News of the supplement has spread quickly through the Internet and

patient support groups. Hardy says at least 6,000 people have used the

supplement for psychiatric problems, and a few thousand more have

tried it for other central nervous system disorders such as multiple

sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, cerebral palsy, and stress. Like many

alternative therapies, the supplement has generated tales of dramatic

results, but Stephan and Hardy know that they need solid research to

prove its effects.

 

Several years ago, they began contacting scientists, including Bonnie

Kaplan, a research psychologist at the University of Calgary, and

Harvard's Charles Popper, inviting them to study their mixture. The

scientists had essentially the same response. " I told them to take

their snake oils somewhere else, " as Kaplan later recalled to a

reporter. Popper was so leery of the pair after his first meeting that

he hid the bottle of the supplement they gave him under his coat as he

walked back to his office: " I was afraid someone was going to see me

with the stuff. "

 

Kaplan finally agreed to meet with Hardy and Stephan in 1996.

Impressed by their sincerity, she decided to offer the formula to a

handful of patients who had not responded to conventional treatments.

Kaplan first tried the supplement on two boys with wildly shifting

moods and explosive tempers. One was so obsessed with violent

fantasies that he could not go more than 20 seconds without thinking

about guns. After he started taking the supplement, Kaplan later wrote

in a case study, his obsessions and his explosive rage diminished.

When he quit the supplements, the obsessions and anger returned. Back

on the supplements again, the symptoms retreated.

 

Those results were encouraging enough that within a few months Kaplan

started a small clinical study of 11 bipolar patients who had not been

able to control their illness with conventional medications. After six

months of treatment, each of the 11 showed improvement in both their

depression and mania. Most were able to cut down on their medications,

and some quit using them altogether.

 

In 2000 Kaplan accompanied Hardy and Stephan to Harvard's McLean

Hospital to talk with other scientists. Popper was skeptical, despite

Kaplan's credentials. That night, however, he got a call from a

colleague whose son had suddenly developed bipolar disorder and was

throwing violent tantrums daily. Popper reluctantly offered him the

sample bottle of the supplement that Hardy and Stephan had given him,

figuring it couldn't hurt. He did not believe it would help. Four days

later, the father called to tell him the tantrums were gone. " The kid

wasn't even irritable, " Popper recalls. " We don't have anything in

psychiatry that can do that. "

 

Like Kaplan, Popper gradually began giving the formula to bipolar

patients who had not done well on psychotropic drugs. The supplement

not only worked for 80 percent of the patients, it also took effect

far more quickly than conventional drugs for many of them. After

testing the supplement for six months and seeing improvements in some

two dozen patients, Popper decided he had something noteworthy enough

to share with colleagues. In 2001 he and Kaplan each published

articles in The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry describing their

findings and encouraging further research. " What if some psychiatric

patients could be treated with inexpensive vitamins and minerals

rather than expensive patented pharmaceuticals? " Popper wrote. It was

a strikingly optimistic statement about a discredited idea. " I knew

going public would raise a lot of eyebrows, that I was putting my

career on the line, " Popper says. " But I was convinced. "

 

One reason that orthomolecular psychiatry was treated with such

derision in the 1960s and early '70s was that biologists had only a

faint understanding of the physical effects that nutrients had on the

brain. In the past two decades, however, researchers have begun to

gain a better understanding of the brain's biochemical machinery.

Psychiatrists now know that nutrients are the brain's backstage crew,

endlessly constructing and maintaining cellular set designs, directing

players to their marks. They also play important roles in the creation

of chemical messengers thought to mediate mood, such as serotonin,

dopamine, and norepinephrine. Zinc is a particularly versatile player,

involved in more than 300 enzymatic reactions; when zinc goes missing,

a cell's DNA and its repair machinery can be damaged.

 

Neuroscientist Bryan Kolb, at the Canadian Centre for Behavioural

Neuroscience in Lethbridge, Alberta, has explored how brain cells are

affected by drugs, hormones, and injury. When Stephan and Hardy first

approached him in 1997, he politely declined to start up a study. He

had little psychiatric expertise, he explained, and his usual

experimental subjects had four legs and long tails.

 

Two years ago, Kolb decided to take another look. In an effort to

tease out a biochemical pathway that might account for the clinical

effects that Kaplan, Popper, and others had described, he ran a series

of rat studies. First, he inflicted injuries in two parts of infant

rats' brains: the frontal lobe, which controls motor function and the

ability to plan and execute tasks, and the parietal lobe, which

influences spatial functions. Half the group then got a diet spiked

with a supplement similar to EMPowerplus and half got plain rat chow.

When Kolb put them through a series of cognitive and spatial-ability

tests, the vitamin-charged rats did markedly better than the control

group.

 

Kolb noticed something else about the supplement-fed rats: " They were

unbelievably calm. " Lab rats usually flinch and squeal when

identification tags are stapled onto their ears, he says. " These rats

acted like nothing had happened. " Kolb then autopsied the rats'

brains: The formula-fed rats had bigger brains than the chow-fed rats.

In areas near where he'd inflicted lesions, the dendrites of the

existing cells-the long, tentacled parts of neurons that conduct

electrical impulses-had sprouted new branches, each ending with

hundreds of new synapses. (In an earlier study, Kolb had found that

the amino acid choline could also stimulate dendritic growth. But the

results weren't as pronounced.)

 

Kolb can't say if such neural connections could alleviate mental

illness. Schizophrenia may be associated with structural abnormalities

in the brain, but so far that's not thought to be the case in mood

disorders like depression or bipolar disorder. Whatever the mechanism,

Kolb says, he's persuaded that " the diet can clearly alter brain

function. "

 

Of course, not everyone with a vitamin deficiency grows violent or

sinks into a clinical depression. So why might a nutritional

supplement help only some people? Kaplan has a possible explanation:

Some of us have " inborn errors of metabolism. " We are born with

unusual nutritional requirements that can affect our mental function.

Mental illness appears to be partly heritable (bipolar disorder, for

one, runs in families), yet no one has discovered a gene for the

disease. Perhaps, Kaplan speculates, what's passed down is a gene that

affects the metabolic pathways influenced by various nutrients. Some

people may simply inherit a metabolism that demands higher-than-normal

amounts of vitamins and minerals. " What's optimal for me may not be

optimal for someone with a mental illness, " Kaplan said at a meeting

of the American Psychiatric Association in 2003. " I've been blessed

with a stable mood, and I could probably eat a terrible diet and not

have any problems. Others may need additional supplementation. "

 

The next research step should be a controlled randomized trial of how

bipolar patients taking supplements fare compared with those taking a

placebo. Such studies are the gold standard for testing drugs and

supplements. But Kaplan and Popper's efforts have been stalled by

controversy. The two scientists have been under attack by a group led

by Terry Polevoy, a dermatologist in Kitchener, Ontario, who runs a

Web site called HealthWatcher.net. A onetime devotee of holistic

therapies, Polevoy now crusades against alternative treatments he

considers scams. For the past four years, he and his colleagues have

accused Stephan and Hardy of irresponsibly marketing an unproven

remedy. The employees that take the company's orders have no medical

training, Polevoy points out, yet they're told to encourage customers,

many of them mentally ill, to stop using traditional medicines and

rely exclusively on the supplement. " People have been injured by

taking this stuff, " Polevoy says. In one well-publicized case, a

schizophrenic man quit his medications in order to take the supplement

and wound up psychotic, in jail, and facing assault charges.

 

Hardy and Stephan, in turn, accuse Polevoy of being a front man for

the pharmaceutical industry, a charge Polevoy denies. " I may go to a

few meetings a year hosted by pharmaceutical companies, " Polevoy says,

" but I'm not paid. "

 

After Kaplan and Popper published accounts of their experiences with

the formula, Polevoy charged the scientists with conducting

experimental research on patients without proper institutional review.

The allegations triggered lengthy investigations by the scientists'

academic institutions, as well as by Canadian and U.S. health

authorities. Kaplan and Popper were ultimately cleared of any

improprieties, but the ordeal left both so gun shy that they stopped

talking publicly about the supplement. (Kaplan declined to be

interviewed for this story. Neither she nor any of the other

scientists mentioned in this story have any financial ties to the

supplement.)

 

Both scientists have had a tough time securing government support for

their psychiatric research. EMPowerplus has yet to be approved for

sale in Canada, and Health Canada, the agency that regulates food and

drugs in that country, has sued Truehope for advertising the product

to Canadians who might wish to import it. " The manufacturer has not

provided us with scientific evidence that the drug is safe and

effective, " says Jirina Vlk, a spokeswoman for the agency. Hardy and

Stephan, in turn, have sued Health Canada for blocking shipments at

the border. Health Canada initially denied Kaplan permission to pursue

a randomized study of the supplement in 100 bipolar patients, although

Kaplan already had funding from the Alberta government. That decision

was reversed in 2004, after the agency established a new division

dedicated to overseeing supplements and natural health products.

 

Meanwhile in the United States, Popper and Kaplan recently secured

approval from the Food and Drug Administration to conduct an even

larger clinical study of the supplement. Other scientists think this

is long overdue. " It's something that needs to be investigated, " says

L. Eugene Arnold, a psychiatrist at Ohio State University who plans to

explore the use of zinc to treat ADHD. " There's no point in people

arguing about whether it works or not without getting some data to get

the answer. " Arnold is no advocate of alternative treatments for mood

disorders, but he thinks it's reasonable to suspect that vitamins and

minerals might have an effect. The standard treatment for bipolar

disorder is lithium, he points out. " And what is that but a mineral? "

 

For Hardy and Stephan, the long wait for scientific validation has

been frustrating. But they are patient. " It's like any new

discovery-acceptance is slow to come, " Stephan says. " But that will

change. It will come. "

 

 

 

 

 

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