Essentially the author suggests that low NAD levels may be a major pathological factor in schizophrenia, which is why it can be treated with niacin. Seems that some chronic sufferers did not recover, I wonder what role declining NAMPT played in the results. According to the author, the niacin flush should also be serving as a sort of biomarker for NAD+ levels. Time for a test? What do you guys think about a niacin, NR, glutamine combo?
The Niacin Flush Pathway in Recovery from Schizophrenia and how Arginine and Glutamine may Provide Added Benefit
W. Todd Penberthy, PhD, JOM Volume 27, Number 1, 2012
"Explanations for the Simultaneous Recovery from Acute Schizophrenia and the Niacin-Flush Response
Hoffer observed that treatment with high doses of the non-flush NAD precursor, nicotinamide, also frequently resulted in recovery from acute schizophrenia similar to recovery from pellagra dementia. While restoration of the nicotinic acid-mediated flush response does correlate with niacin-mediated recovery from schizophrenia, it does not necessarily mean that this effect was primarily the result of the flush response.It seems much more likely that the restoration of NAD levels is central to recovery, where NAD as NAD+, NADP+, NADH, and/or NADPH, may be restoring prostaglandin- flush pathways by one or a combination of the >450 reactions that require NAD for ac- tivity. There are several possible explanations for the observed reduced flush response. In this section we give consideration to each explanation and ultimately come to the conclusion that the reduced flush response is firstly an NAD deficiency, where PUFA reductions are likely to be secondary to this effect. This analysis concludes that schizo- phrenia is most likely not an essential fatty acid deficiency disease, but more of a NAD deficiency disease.
Firstly, the reduced niacin flush response observed in schizophrenia likely involves nia- cin receptor ligand mediated desensitization. A metabolic study of schizophrenia indicates a general increase in PUFA catabolism.31 Beta-hydroxybutryate levels were found to be elevated 2.6 fold. Beta-hydroxybutyrate is proposed to be the naturally occurring endogenous ligand for the high affinity nicotinic acid G-protein coupled receptor.32 Decreased levels of the GPR109a protein are observed in the brains of schizophrenics, as are increased GPR109a transcripts.33 Such ligand dependent receptor down-regulation (a.k.a., receptor desensitization) is a common theme with the G-protein coupled receptor protein superfamily. Thus, NAD may be simply restoring PUFA metabolism such that the levels of the beta-hydroxybutyrate ligand for the high affinity nicotinic acid G- protein coupled receptor are returned to normal levels. The GPR109a protein may then be expressed at correct levels, thus restoring the niacin-flush response to normal as well. This general alteration is surely a major contributor to the reduced flush response seen in schizophrenics."
[...]
"Glutamine is required for the last step in the conversion of niacin to NAD when starting from either tryptophan or nicotinic acid/niacin. [...] Glutamine is the most abundant amino acid in the body. To date glutamine studies have mostly focused on treating severely burned patients, those experiencing cancer cachexia, or undergoing chemotherapy.63 Therapeutic benefits were observed for all of these situa- tions. The most effective doses were seen after administration of 10-15 g three times each day with the biggest responses seen closer to the 45 g per day dosage.[...] In sum- mary, 3-10 g of arginine three times each day, and 10-15 g of glutamine three times each day may additionally provide therapeutic benefit to the schizophrenic."
LexLux
It seems the highlights and link you provided in post #440 are the same I posted in #438 - the abstract of the study. Was your link supposed to go the full study version?
I added in some additional details, the abstract tends to be a close reflection of the content. Was there something specific you wanted to find? It was a pain getting access to the fulll text, it wouldn't let me download a pdf unfortunately.
Edited by LexLux, 01 June 2014 - 01:05 AM.