I don't know how you do it Kurtosis, but I'm glad that there's someone who can.
This suggestion for B_Daniel sounds a lot more comfortable than the disulfram test...
"All I'm suggesting is niacinamide, methionine and not drinking alcohol for a while to see if it reduces POIS."
And if I understood it right, should produce the "same" diagnostic results albeit from another angle.
These are the things that we need, every day, a step closer and giving real life to theories.
I believe so Dave. One is the "try to cure it" approach and the other is the "confirm by making it worse" approach. What would worry me is the amount of times "toxic" is mentioned in the research paper at
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15019299 The one I linked in response to B_Daniel.
There are some other problems also. 1 is that in any cognitive illness you can't rule out a good or bad placebo effect.
I read some piracetam research papers where the incidence of complaints about side effects was double for the placebo takers than the piracetam takers. It's kinda funny but when you tell someone they're going to take some kind of drug they go nuts and start anticipating negative side effects.
So anyone taking disulfiram to try and make you worse may need a few days to confirm it wasn't working and because of the nature of that drug, when it works you feel awful. Like a really bad hangover according to comments on forums. Alcoholics have support forms too. They make interesting reading.
So all I'm saying is that there might be a modification to the normal POIS treatment.
- Don't take any supplemental vitamin b1 or vitamin A. Look at your diet to check you're not eating foods high in betacarotene.
- Don't drink alcohol.
- New offices contain much more acetaldehyde (and acetate) than older ones. this is a byproduct of the manufacturing process for lots of things in your house. So try to get out for walks.
- Take some vitamin D or get some exposure to the sun.
- If you smoke then try to reduce it. I'm sure your doctor has told you this a hundred times and they were right
- Take b3 every day. niacinamide may be best to avoid daily itching (there are other reasons). Also, it may help with the cravings if you've cut down smoking to take niacinamide every day. The idea is that the problem behind POIS would exist in our bodies every day and we'd need supplementary b3 to assist us.
If you can afford it then skip the niacin and try 10mg of NADH every day. I can afford it so
I'm going to continue with 10mg of ENADA NADH every day.
(Note, the ENADA stuff is coated such that it is absorbed in your colon, otherwise it's just burned in your stomach acid and it would be of no benefit).
- take methionine every 2nd day to help deal with load on the liver of excess niacinamide.
- take b6 and b12 for similar reasons. The problem here is that they're sold in huge % of the RDA outside of b complexes. Perhaps
it might be an idea to find a b complex with a very modest amount of b1 and hope the daily niacinamide reduces the amount of acetaldehyde it could bind with.
Also, b6 can be converted to niacin when the body needs it because there's an extra acetaldehyde load.
- Eat some fruit with a high anti-oxidant profile. Blueberries are really good.
So here's something interesting. DOPAL gets converted to DOPAC and this DOPAC stuff isn't as harmful BUT it may still make you feel unwell and needs to be excreted. Coffee is interesting in both containing acetaldehyde (the compound in DOPAL) and helping flush out acetate (DOPAC). Perhaps a mildly caffeinated diuretic like tea could be useful if this treatment makes you feel sicker in the early days. Either way, I've been drinking a blueberry tea and taking the NADH and I haven't had to urinate this much in years.
I realise that I'm describing a "detox" treatment with added niacinamide and methionine. It's making me uncomfortable too as these are often advocated by people who run a mile from a scientific explanation but what can I do