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Cure for Schizophrenia - Detailed

Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 7:51 pm
by For The Lord
Here's some extremely useful/valuable info I received today:

Schizophrenia (Psychosis)
We have helped many clients with Schizophrenia or Psychosis by working with them to create personalised nutritional programmes based upon their health history, symptoms and test results. If you would like to learn more about how we can help you, please click here http://www.foodforthebrain.org/content. ... ntent=1802.
 
Read on for more information on how Schizophrenia or Psychosis can be influenced by nutrition. Testimonials are also available http://www.foodforthebrain.org/content. ... ntent=1717.
 
Schizophrenia is a loaded word, feared by patient and public alike.  It conjures up images of dangerous and crazy people.  In truth, most members of the public have no real idea what is meant by this word, often believing that sufferers have split personalities, like Jekyll and Hyde.  About one in a hundred people have schizophrenia and can have a variety of symptoms which are known as ‘positive’ symptoms and ‘negative’ symptoms.
‘Positive’ symptoms include hallucinations, delusions, disorganised speech, disorganised behaviour and inappropriate emotions.
‘Negative’ symptoms include alogia (problem with fluency of language and thoughts), affective blunting (problems with expression of emotions and feelings), anhedonia (lack of ability to experience pleasure), avolition (lack of ability to start things and follow through), and attentional impairment (lack of ability to focus attention)

A person diagnosed with schizophrenia may have any or all of these, but at a level of severity that makes them either unable to cope or others unable to cope with them.

Do you have symptoms of psychosis?
Most of us have, at some time or other, experienced some level of psychosis, a temporary losing touch with reality as we collectively know it. The normal person recovering from the delusions brought on by a high fever can breathe a great sigh of relief at the thought that his experience was only temporary. The person under the influence of the hallucinogenic drug LSD can at least rely on the clock, since the drug-induced psychosis will wear off with time. Some people’s experience of so-called schizophrenia can be likened to a nightmare state from which they may awaken intermittently.  For some, schizophrenia is like living in a nonstop nightmare.

What causes schizophrenia?
As is the case with most mental illness, the cause of schizophrenia is not known. There are a number of theories relating to neurotransmitter imbalances and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have shown a broad array of brain abnormalities.
The conventional treatment for schizophrenia is usually long-term treatment with antipsychotic medication. While this can be quite effective for the positive symptoms, there is often little improvement in negative symptoms meaning that the sufferer may have a poor quality of life. On top of that, side-effects of medication can be considerable in some cases, and the newer antipsychotics (known as atypical) can cause rapid and considerable weight gain and increase the risk for diabetes and metabolic syndrome.
A nutritional approach works alongside conventional treatment and may improve both positive and negative symptoms, and also reduce the side-effects of medication. In some cases, the improvements are so great that the patient’s doctor may take the decision to cut down or discontinue medication.
At the Brain Bio Centre, the best results we’ve seen in helping those with schizophrenia or other psychotic disorders are achieved by investigating a number of possible avenues. These include:
• Blood sugar problems made worse by excess stimulant and drug use
• Essential fat imbalances
• Too many oxidants and not enough antioxidants
• Niacin (Vitamin B3) therapy
• Methylation problems helped by B12 and folic acid
• Pyroluria and the need for zinc
• Food allergies

Quite apart from these nutritional factors, having good psychological support and a stable home environment make a major impact upon those with mental health problems.
You can find out which of these factors is likely to affect you by completing the FREE Mental Health Check http://www.foodforthebrain.org/content. ... ontent=517.
To find out more about these factors read on, or click on our
Action Plan to Overcome Schizophrenia http://www.foodforthebrain.org/content. ... ntent=1645
DIET & NUTRITION – WHAT WORKS
BALANCE YOUR BLOOD SUGAR AND AVOID STIMULANTS
Your intake of sugar, refined carbohydrates, caffeine, alcohol and cigarettes, as well as stimulant drugs, all affect the ability to keep one’s blood sugar level balanced. On top of this common antipsychotic medication may also further disturb blood sugar control. Stimulant drugs, from amphetamines to cocaine, can induce schizophrenia. The incidence of blood sugar problems and diabetes is also much higher in those with schizophrenia.
Therefore it is strongly advisable to reduce, as much as possible, your intake of sugar, refined carbohydrates, caffeine and stimulant drugs and eat a low glycemic load diet.
See action plan for our recommendations.
INCREASE ESSENTIAL FATS
We build our brain from specialised essential fats. Of course, this isn’t a static process. We are always building membranes, then breaking them down, and building new ones. The breaking down, or stripping of essential fats from brain, membranes, is done by an enzyme called phospholipase A2 (PLA2). This is often overactive in people with schizophrenia, and this leads to a greater need for these fats, which are quickly lost from the brain. This explains earlier findings that schizophrenic patients have much lower levels of fatty acids in the frontal cortex of the brain. So, what’s the evidence that increasing a person’s intakes of essential fats makes a difference?
The World Health Organization conducted a survey of the incidence and outcome of schizophrenia in eight countries in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas.  They found that while the incidence was surprisingly similar in all countries, the outcomes were very different.  In some countries, schizophrenia seemed to be a relatively mild and self-limiting disease, whereas in others it was a severe and life-long condition.  Of all the factors considered which might explain this, by far the strongest correlation was with the fat content of the diet.  Those countries with a high intake of essential fats from fish and vegetables, as opposed to meat, had much less severe outcomes. 

Dr Iain Glen from the mental health department of Aberdeen University found that 80 per cent of schizophrenics are essential fat deficient. He gave 50 patients essential fat supplements and reported a dramatic response.  A larger placebo-controlled, crossover, 10-month study of the effects of EFA supplementation in schizophrenics, including supplements of zinc, B6, B3 and vitamin C with omega-6 fats, also produced significant improvements in schizophrenic symptoms.   Two trials giving omega 3 fish oil high in EPA produced significant improvement.  But not all results are positive. A trial using only omega-3 fats versus placebo found no significant improvement in mental health. 
Of even greater promise are the results of a study into the preventative benefits of omega-3. This study, published in the British Journal of Psychiatry in 2010, identified 81 young adults aged 13 to 25 years with “ultra-high risk of developing psychosis”. They were given (in a randomised, double-blind fashion) 1.2g of omega-3 oil or placebo for a 12 week period and then monitored for a further 40 weeks, so the total study period was 1 year. At the end of the study only 5% of those taking the omega-3, compared with 28% of those taking placebo had developed psychosis. And of the 5% taking the omega-3 who did develop psychosis, they had significantly reduced symptoms (both positive and negative) and improved functioning.
 
Where’s the evidence? http://www.foodforthebrain.org/content. ... ontent=488 Enter ‘omegas' and ‘schizophrenia' into the search field for a summary of studies that demonstrate the effect of essential fats on schizophrenia.
Side effects? Sometimes, when starting omega-3 fish oil supplements, you can experience loose stools or fish-tasting burps. If this happens just try a lower dose.

Contraindications with medication? You shouldn’t take high dose omega-3 oils if you are also taking ‘blood-thinning’ medication.
See action plan for our recommendations.
UP ANTIOXIDANTS

There’s another part to the essential fat story. These fats are also prone to destruction in the brain, and in the diet, by oxidants.  Indeed, there is evidence of more oxidation in the frontal cortex of those with schizophrenia. Therefore, as well as increasing the intake of essential fats, it makes sense to follow a diet (and lifestyle) that minimises oxidants from fried or burnt food and maximises intake of antioxidant nutrients such as vitamins A, C and E. These alone have been shown to help. Vitamin C is also an anti-stress vitamin and may counter too much adrenalin, which is often found in those diagnosed with schizophrenia. Smoking is both a source of oxidants and destroys vitamin C.
Vitamin C deficiency is also far more common than realised in people with mental health problems, often because they don’t look after themselves properly and eat poorly. Professor Derri Shtasel from the department of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia described a case of a woman who was confused and hearing voices, as well as having physical symptoms. She was tested for vitamin C status and found to be very deficient. After being given vitamin C she had fewer hallucinations, her speech improved and she became more motivated and sociable.  Vitamin C has been shown to reduce the symptoms of schizophrenia in research trials,  and a number of studies have shown that people diagnosed with mental illness may have much greater requirements for this vitamin – often ten times higher – and are frequently deficient. 
Where’s the evidence? Enter ‘antioxidants' and ‘schizophrenia' into the search field for a summary of studies that demonstrate the effect of antioxidants on schizophrenia.

Side effects? Excessive vitamin C can cause loose stools in some individuals. If this happens, reduce the dose to a tolerable level.
Contraindications with medication? None known.
See action plan for our recommendations.

CONSIDER NIACIN
One of the classic vitamin deficiency diseases is pellagra – Niacin (vitamin B3) deficiency. The classic symptoms of this condition are the '3 Ds' – dermatitis, diarrhoea and dementia. A more extensive list of symptoms might include headaches, sleep disturbance, hallucinations, thought disorder, anxiety and depression.

If you have these symptoms you may need a lot more niacin than the basic RDA, sometimes as much as 2,000mg or 100 times the RDA. We call this ‘vitamin dependency’, but of course we are all vitamin dependent. It’s just that some people need more, perhaps for genetic reasons, than others.
The use of ‘megadoses’ of niacin was first tried by Drs Humphrey Osmond and Abram Hoffer in 1951. So impressed were they with the results in acute schizophrenics that, in 1953, they ran the first double-blind therapeutic trials in the history of psychiatry. Their first two trials showed significant improvement giving at least 3gs (3,000mg) a day, compared to placebos. They also found that chronic schizophrenics, not first-time sufferers but long-term inpatients, showed little improvement. The results of six double blind controlled trials showed that the natural recovery rate was doubled. Later they found that even chronic patients, treated for several years with niacin in combination with other nutrients, often recovered.
Hoffer’s discovery was, however, side-lined partly due to some studies which gave niacin to long-term schizophrenic patients who had been on medication for several years and failed to respond to niacin in the short-term.
Since then, Dr Hoffer published ten-year follow-ups on schizophrenics treated with niacin, compared to those not treated with niacin. In the niacin patients there were substantially fewer admissions, days in hospital and suicides. He continued to treat acute schizophrenics with niacin, plus other nutrients, including vitamin C, folic acid and essential fats, and reported a high recovery rate in acute schizophrenics who follow his nutritional programme. Over his long career Dr Hoffer recorded 4,000 cases and published double-blind trials. He was convinced that his approach was a major breakthrough in the treatment of mental illness.
Just how niacin works is still a bit of a mystery. Knowing that people with schizophrenia had hallucinations, Dr Hoffer’s explanation was that niacin stops the brain from producing adrenochrome from adrenalin, a chemical known to induce hallucinations. Working together with vitamin B12 and folic acid, niacin helps keep adrenalin and noradrenalin levels in balance, and prevent the abnormal production of adrenochrome in the brain. These nutrients are ‘methyl’ donors and acceptors, and act intelligently in the brain to keep everything in check. Once again, some people may simply need more to stay healthy.
Niacin, through its flushing action improves oxygen supply to the brain. Niacin is also needed for the brain to make use of essential fats. The ‘happy’ neurotransmitter serotonin also needs niacin. Serotonin is made from the amino acid tryptophan, but only in the presence of enough niacin. So there are many possible ways this vitamin could affect brain function.

Where’s the evidence?
Niacin comes in different forms. Niacin (formerly known as nicotinic acid) causes a harmless blushing sensation, accompanied with an increase in skin temperature and slight itching. This effect can be quite severe, and lasts for up to 30 minutes. However, if 500mg or 1,000mg of niacin are taken twice a day at regular intervals, the blushing stops.
Some supplement companies produce a ‘no-flush’ niacin by binding niacin with inositol. This works, so it's probably the best form, but it is more expensive. Niacin also comes in the form of niacinamide, which doesn’t cause blushing either. It has to be said, however, that both of these forms appear to be slightly less effective than niacin. This may be because the blushing effect of niacin improves blood flow, and hence nutrient supply to the brain.
Contraindications with medication? None known.
Side effects? The amount of niacin that’s needed is around 1 to 6g a day. A minimum therapeutic level is 1g a day. These levels are in the order of 100 times the RDA. Levels of niacin much higher than these, particularly in sustained-release tablets, can be liver toxic. Out of perhaps 100,000 people taking megadoses of niacin at levels of several grams over the past 40 years, there have been two deaths due to liver failure. In a third case, jaundice resulted from a slow-release preparation. When the same patient was placed back on standard niacin, he no longer got jaundice. In any event, anything over 1g is best taken under the supervision of a qualified practitioner. If you become nauseated, that is an indication to stop supplementation and resume three days later, with a lower amount. If you have a history of liver problems, you should have regular monitoring of liver enzymes.
See action plan for our recommendations.

METHYLATION, B12, FOLIC ACID AND B6
Methylation is a critical process in the brain that helps maintain the right chemical balance. An indicator of faulty methylation is having a high level of a toxic amino acid in the blood called homocysteine. The body makes homocysteine from dietary protein and, provided you are getting enough of certain vitamins1, especially folic acid, B12 and B6, homocysteine levels decrease. Many people with schizophrenia, especially young males, tend to have a high level of homocysteine, despite no obvious dietary lack of these vitamins.  High levels of homocysteine and low blood levels of folic acid have been reported by many research groups. These unusually high levels don’t appear to relate to diet or lifestyle factors, such as smoking.  People diagnosed with schizophrenia are more likely to have inherited a genetic variation of a key homocysteine lowering enzyme, which may make them need more of these and other nutrients.
Research at Kings College Hospital psychiatry department in London has found high doses of folic acid to be highly effective in schizophrenic patients.  They used 15mg a day, which is 75 times the RDA! Folic acid is not toxic at this level. We recommend starting with 1mg a day, increasing the dose only under supervision of your health care provider.
Vitamin B12, which like folic acid is involved in methylation, has also been shown to help schizophrenic patients. Vitamin B12 is difficult to absorb, especially in large amounts, and some doctors have reported good results giving weekly, or twice-weekly, injections of 1mg of vitamin B12. A form of B12, methyl B12, is more easily absorbed, and B12 can be taken in sub-lingual form which is even better absorbed.
Supplementing a combination of folic acid, B12, B6, along with a methyl donor called TMG, the mineral zinc and the antioxidant N-Acetyl-Cysteine  has been shown to most effective in improving mental health, and lowering the homocysteine levels of schizophrenia patients with high homocysteine levels.
Where’s the evidence?  Enter ‘folate' or 'folic acid' and ‘schizophrenia' into the search field for a summary of studies that demonstrate the effect of folic acid on schizophrenia.

Side effects? Folic acid supplementation can mask the symptoms of an underlying B12 deficiency, so we don’t recommend supplementing folic acid on its own.
Contraindications with medication?
See action plan for our recommendations.
ARE YOU PYROLURIC? THE ZINC LINK
Possibly one of the most significant ‘undiscovered’ discoveries in the nutritional treatment of mental illness is that many mentally ill people are deficient in vitamin B6 and zinc. But this deficiency is no ordinary deficiency: you can't correct it by simply eating more foods that are rich in zinc and B6. It is connected with the abnormal production of a group of chemicals called ‘pyrroles’. A person with a high level of pyrroles in the urine needs more B6 and zinc than usual, since they rob the body of these essential nutrients, increasing a person’s requirements to stay healthy. At the Brain Bio Centre, we find many people diagnosed with schizophrenia have ‘pyroluria’.

The test for pyroluria is remarkably simple and very inexpensive. When you add a chemical known as Erhlich’s reagant to urine, it will turn mauve if there are krytpopyrroles present. Dubbed ‘mauve factor’ in the 1960s, this was found in 11 per cent of normal people, 24 per cent of disturbed children, 42 per cent of psychiatric patients and 52 per cent of schizophrenics.   Dr Carl Pfeiffer and Dr Arthur Sohler at Princeton’s Brain Bio Center worked out that these abnormal chemicals would bind to B6 and zinc, inducing deficiency. With this knowledge, effective therapy was at hand.
The Signs and Symptoms of Pyroluria: Pyroluria is often a stress-related condition, with symptoms usually beginning in the teenage years after a stressful event such as exams or the breakup of a relationship.
Pyrolurics often have weak immune systems and may suffer from frequent ear infections as a child, colds, fevers and chills. Other symptoms include fatigue, nervous exhaustion, insomnia, poor memory, hyperactivity, seizures, poor learning ability, confusion, an inability to think clearly, depression and mood swings. In girls there can be irregular periods and in boys relative impotence. The pyroluric patient can have bad breath and a strange body odour, a poor tolerance of alcohol or drugs, may wake up with nausea, and have cold hands and feet and abdominal pain.
A lack of dream recall is very common. It is normal to remember dreams, and many people, whether or not they have mental health problems, report better dream recall once they start supplementing optimal amounts of vitamin B6 and zinc. Other tell-tale signs include pale skin, white marks on the nails and, in extreme cases, poor hair growth and loss of hair colour. Often a person with pyroluria also has skin problems such as acne or eczema.
Not all these symptoms are present in all pyrolurics, but if you are experiencing a number of them, it is well worth testing for.

Side effects? No single nutrient should be supplemented at high levels over the long-term without retesting the need to do so as imbalances can occur. Vitamin B6 can be toxic at high doses, the key symptom of which is tingling hands or fingers. If this occurs, stop the B6 immediately and the tingling will stop within 1-3 days. Once it has stopped, you could restart the B6 at half the previous dose.
Contraindications with medication? None known

CHECK FOR ALLERGY
Some people with mental health problems are sensitive to gluten, especially wheat gluten, which can bring on all sorts of symptoms of mental illness. This has been known since the 1950s, when Dr Lauretta Bender noted that schizophrenic children were frequently had coeliac disease (severe gluten allergy).  By 1966 she had recorded 20 such cases from among around 2,000 schizophrenic children. In 1961 Drs Graff and Handford published data showing that four out of 37 adult male schizophrenics admitted to the University of Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia had a history of coeliac disease in childhood. 
These early observations greatly interested Dr Curtis Dohan at the University of Pennsylvania. He suspected that the two were linked and decided to test his theory by randomly placed all men admitted to a locked psychiatric ward in a Veterans Administration Hospital in Coatsville, Pennsylvania, either on a diet containing no milk or cereals, or on one that was relatively high in cereals. (Milk was eliminated from the diet because some people do not benefit when only glutens are removed.) All other treatment continued as normal. Midway through the experiment, 62 per cent of the group on no milk and cereals were released to a ‘full privileges’ ward. Only 36 per cent of those patients receiving a diet including cereal were able to leave the locked ward. When the wheat gluten was secretly placed back into the diet, the improved patients once again relapsed. 
These results have since been confirmed by other double-blind placebo-controlled trials. In one, published in the Journal of Biological Psychiatry, 30 patients suffering from anxiety, depression, confusion or difficulty in concentration were tested, using a placebo-controlled trial, as to whether individual food allergies could really produce mental symptoms in these individuals.  The results showed that allergies alone, not placebos, were able to produce the following symptoms: severe depression, nervousness, feeling of anger without a particular object, loss of motivation and severe mental blankness.  The foods/chemicals that produced most severe mental reactions were wheat, milk, cane sugar, tobacco smoke and eggs. 
However, more recent research hasn’t found that coeliacs disease in more prevalent among those with schizophrenia or vice versa.  However, the possibility of allergy to other foods may be worth investigating, especially if allergic symptoms, including eczema, asthma, digestive problems, ear infections, sinusitis or rhinitis are also present. At the Brain Bio Centre we frequently find that food intolerances to a range of foods appear to be contributing to symptoms, so investigating all types of food sensitivities is recommended.
Where’s the evidence? Enter ‘allergies' and ‘schizophrenia' into the search field for a summary of studies that demonstrate the effect of allergies on schizophrenia.
See action plan for our recommendations.

REFERENCES:
Blood sugar
Vanable PA, Carey MP, Carey KB, Maisto SA.Smoking among psychiatric outpatients: relationship to substance use, diagnosis, and illness severity.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2003 Dec;17(4):259-65.     
Hyperglycemia and diabetes in patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorders.Diabetes Care. 2006 Apr;29(4):786-91.
Omega-3
Cohen D, Stolk RP, Grobbee DE, Gispen-de Wied CC, Membrane phospholipid composition, alterations in neurotransmitter systems and schizophrenia,Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry.  2005 Jul;29(6):878-88.
D. F. Horrobin DF et al., ‘Fatty acid levels in the brains of schizophrenics and normal controls’, Biol Psychiatry, Vol 30, 1991, pp. 795-805
D. F. Horrobin et al., ‘The membrane hypothesis of schizophrenia’, Schizophrenia Research, Vol 13, 1994, pp. 195-207
O. Christensen and E. Christensen, ‘Fat consumption and schizophrenia’, Acta Psychiatr Scand, Vol 78, 1988, pp. 587-91
K. S. Vaddadi et al., ‘A double-blind trial of essential fatty acid supplementation in patients with tardive dyskinesia’, Psychiatry Res, Vol 27(3), 1989, pp. 313-23
Emsley R, Oosthuizen P, van Rensburg S, 'Clinical potential of omega-3 fatty acids in the treatment of schizophrenia', CNS Drugs. 2003;17(15):1081-91. 
W. S. Fenton et al., ‘A placebo-controlled trial of omega-3 fatty acid (ethyl eicosapentaenoic acid) supplementation for residual symptoms and cognitive impairment in schizophrenia’, Am J Psychiatry, Vol 158(12), 2001, pp. 2071-4
G. Paul Amminger, et al (2010) Long-Chain Omega-3 Fatty Acids for Indicated Prevention of Psychotic Disorders: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial. Arch Gen Psychiatry 67(2):146-154
Antioxidants
 D. Shtasel et al., Psychiatric Services, Vol 46(3), March 1995, p. 293
G. Milner, Brit J Psychiat, Vol 109, 1963, pp. 294-99
K. Suboticanec et al., Biol Psychiatry, Vol 28, 1990, pp. 959-66
Homocysteine and methylation
B. Regland et al, J Neural Transm Gen Sect, vol. 100, no. 2 (1995), pp. 165-169
Goff DC et al Am J Psychiatry. 2004 Sep;161(9):1705-8
Levine J et al Am J Psychiatry. 2002 Oct;159(10):1790-2.
Applebaum J et al J Psychiatr Res. 2004 Jul-Aug;38(4):413-6.
Regland B et al J Neural Transm. 1997;104(8-9):931-41
Lewis SJ et al Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet. 2005 Feb 23
M. W. Carney and B. F. Sheffield, ‘Serum folic acid and B12 in 272 psychiatric in-patients’, Psychol Med, Vol 8(1), 1978, pp. 139-44
P. Godfrey et al., ‘Enhancement of recovery from psychiatric illness by methylfolate’, Lancet, Vol 336(8712), 1990, pp. 392-5 
B. Regland et al., ‘Homocysteinemia and schizophrenia as a case of methylation deficiency’, J Neural Transm Gen Sect, Vol 98(2), 1994, pp. 143-52
Levine J et al., Homocysteine-Reducing Strategies Improve Symptoms in Chronic Schizophrenic Patients with Hyperhomocysteinemia
Pyroluria
P. O. O'Reilly et al., ‘The mauve factor: an evaluation’, Dis Nerv Syst, Vol 26(9), 1965, pp. 562-8
Food allergy
L. Bender, ‘Childhood schizophrenia’, Psychiatric Quarterly, Vol 27, 1953, pp. 3-81
H. Graff and A. Handford, ‘Celiac syndrome in the case history of five schizophrenics’, Psychiatric Quarterly, Vol 35, 1961, pp. 306-13
F. C. Dohan et al., ‘Relapsed schizophrenics: more rapid improvement on a milk and cereal-free diet’, Brit J Psychiat, Vol 115, 1969, pp. 595-6
D. S. King, ‘Can allergic exposure provoke psychological symptoms? A double-blind test’, Biol Psychiatry, Vol 16(1), 1981, pp. 3-19
W. Philpott and D. Kalita, Brain Allergies, Keats Publishing (1980)
West J, Logan RF, Hubbard RB, Card TR.  Risk of schizophrenia in people with coeliac disease, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease: a general population-based study.
Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2006 Jan 1;23(1):71-4.

Re: Cure for Schizophrenia - Detailed

Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 8:43 pm
by For The Lord
Even more important is getting rid of demonic ties to your mind. If you have Schizophrenia, whether you realize it or not, your thoughts are under Satan's oppression. A Great book that explains nearly everything about uprooting / casting out demonic ties is called "Shadowboxing" (by Dr. Henry Malone).. it talks about 14 root spirits... you may have many of these root spirits based on sinful acts you have gone through with in the past. There is also power in the words you speak (even normal conversation) .. you can consider it along the lines of karma; if you use foul/vulgar language, then you open up a door to evil possibilities, whether it be in the physical world or in the spiritual realm.

Re: Cure for Schizophrenia - Detailed

Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 9:53 pm
by Ivellious
What a bunch of crap. Schizophrenia is a loose medical term that encompasses a vast range of illnesses and symptoms that we know almost nothing about. We know particularly little about cures. There's way too much wrong with this post to name everything, but I'll start with the fact that most your sources are from a half century ago or more...that alone frightens me.

Re: Cure for Schizophrenia - Detailed

Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 10:02 pm
by Danieltwotwenty
There are many types of causes for Schizophrenia, how do you apply different methods for the different types for example what about the parasitic toxoplasmosis http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 085151.htm , how do they treat a patient where the underlying problem may be parasitic?

Dan

Re: Cure for Schizophrenia - Detailed

Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 10:18 pm
by neo-x
For The Lord » Tue Jan 24, 2012 9:43 am

Even more important is getting rid of demonic ties to your mind. If you have Schizophrenia, whether you realize it or not, your thoughts are under Satan's oppression. A Great book that explains nearly everything about uprooting / casting out demonic ties is called "Shadowboxing" (by Dr. Henry Malone).. it talks about 14 root spirits... you may have many of these root spirits based on sinful acts you have gone through with in the past. There is also power in the words you speak (even normal conversation) .. you can consider it along the lines of karma; if you use foul/vulgar language, then you open up a door to evil possibilities, whether it be in the physical world or in the spiritual realm.
This is complete nonsense. This is the kind of thing that gives the message of God, a bad name. Don't play with someone's life and health, people who may need medical attention. Don't misguide people. The Bible never undermines medicine, nor does it say that such disorders are of the work of the demonic possession. This is so wrong...

I have seen people in demonic possession and I also know how people, who are medically sick and need medicinal care are very different than what you are saying.

And let me also tell you that no demonic possession is healed by a book, nor a heart can change without Christ, nor a sin can be cleansed by human efforts. It is Christ and Christ alone who does that. So stop making such claims which elevate people and their tricks rather than Christ.

In my experience, people who claim such things, do not know the nature and love of God and how he works.

I sincerely suggest that you go back and learn and experience God's love, take good christian counselling and get to know Christ in person.

Re: Cure for Schizophrenia - Detailed

Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 8:34 am
by For The Lord
This method was confirmed through research by Dr. Abram Hoffer. He was successful in curing schizophrenia on a consistent basis.

"In the treatment of schizophrenia, the American Schizophrenia Association Committee on Therapy reported 80 percent recoveries based on a follow up of 1,500 patients.  Other physicians report a recovery rate of more than 75 per cent an considerably higher in children.  The orthomolecular treatment has been found to be highly effective in treating other disorders including depression, behaviour and learning problems in children, alcoholism, and problems associated with aging."


I'm not trying to promote that company, I wanted to get this info out.

Re: Cure for Schizophrenia - Detailed

Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 8:47 am
by For The Lord
neo-x wrote:
For The Lord » Tue Jan 24, 2012 9:43 am

Even more important is getting rid of demonic ties to your mind. If you have Schizophrenia, whether you realize it or not, your thoughts are under Satan's oppression. A Great book that explains nearly everything about uprooting / casting out demonic ties is called "Shadowboxing" (by Dr. Henry Malone).. it talks about 14 root spirits... you may have many of these root spirits based on sinful acts you have gone through with in the past. There is also power in the words you speak (even normal conversation) .. you can consider it along the lines of karma; if you use foul/vulgar language, then you open up a door to evil possibilities, whether it be in the physical world or in the spiritual realm.
This is complete nonsense. This is the kind of thing that gives the message of God, a bad name. Don't play with someone's life and health, people who may need medical attention. Don't misguide people. The Bible never undermines medicine, nor does it say that such disorders are of the work of the demonic possession. This is so wrong...

I have seen people in demonic possession and I also know how people, who are medically sick and need medicinal care are very different than what you are saying.

And let me also tell you that no demonic possession is healed by a book, nor a heart can change without Christ, nor a sin can be cleansed by human efforts. It is Christ and Christ alone who does that. So stop making such claims which elevate people and their tricks rather than Christ.

In my experience, people who claim such things, do not know the nature and love of God and how he works.

I sincerely suggest that you go back and learn and experience God's love, take good christian counselling and get to know Christ in person.

Demonic possession is not healed by the book, the book tells you how to get healed / set free from it. The medical community does not understand what they can't see - spiritual things are invisible to the naked eye... Demons are outside of our sphere of observation... they watch us and even our thoughts, and suppress our knowledge and use evil to manipulate evil when they are able to (footholds into someone's mind can develop when they commit an egregious sin).

Re: Cure for Schizophrenia - Detailed

Posted: Wed Jan 25, 2012 6:27 am
by Canuckster1127
It didn't take long to find out how credible Hoffer is.
Hoffer's claims regarding schizophrenia and his theories of orthomolecular medicine have been criticized.[21] In 1973, the American Psychiatric Association reported methodological flaws in Hoffer's work on niacin as a schizophrenia treatment and referred to follow-up studies that did not confirm any benefits of the treatment.[22] Multiple additional studies in the United States,[23] Canada,[24] and Australia[25] similarly failed to find benefits of megavitamin therapy to treat schizophrenia. The term "orthomolecular medicine" was labeled a misnomer as early as 1973[22]. Psychiatrist and critic of psychiatry Thomas Szasz called Hoffer's ideas about schizoprhenia "pure quackery" and his claims "arrogant" for attributing the condition to a nutrient deficiency as well as their support for Schizophrenics International, a group that attempts to deal with schizophrenia similar to alcoholism in Alcoholics Anonymous.[26] (Wikipedia entry)
Studies that aren't replicable which then are used to make claims of this nature, are on par with snake oil salesmen of the past.

The only contribution that appears credible is that there is some indication that niacin treatment can have positive contributions to an overall treatment plan. That's a far cry from the claims being made here.