Amines, antibiotics, and emotional disorders. Serotonin concentration, adrenaline and dopamine in cerebrospinal fluid and platelets



There was a relationship between the level of brain amines in the brain (especially serotonin, adrenaline and dopamine) and emotional disorders. These bio-amines are found to be higher in brain-specific areas (especially under the hypothalamus, pineal gland and the median limbic system) and are lower in these areas in suicide patients and increase after antidepressant treatment.
Drugs (Parkinson's), Parkinson's disease that reduce the concentration of dopamine, lead to depressive symptoms, and studies confirm the lack of activity of the future of D1 in depression.
Increased proportion of suicide attempts and aggressive actions were observed in patients with depression who had a decrease in the concentration of serotonin in cerebrospinal fluid and platelets. Some researchers say the lack of serotonin may be necessary to trigger emotional distress, but the level of norepinephrine determines whether it is depressed or excited.
It has been found recently that the body of the depressed person retain a quantity of sodium more than 50% of the nature, and the person who has a manic disorder increases this percentage to 200% and recovery of these patients is the ratio to normal, and to prove that they were given these patients anti-LDH hormone that holds water and sodium In the body resulting in the deterioration of the condition of these patients.