Dietary Regulation of Dopamine, Vitamins ... - Cure Parkinson's

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Dietary Regulation of Dopamine, Vitamins and Minerals Demystified

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Steve Blake - He has authored Parkinson’s Disease: Dietary Regulation of Dopamine, Vitamins and Minerals Demystified .

Diet can have an impact on our ability to make dopamine. Find out how to adjust diet to improve dopamine production. We will explore how to avoid the foods and toxins that may deplete the brain cells that make dopamine. We will learn about certain foods that help protect brain cells and slow degeneration. Since symptoms do not often show up before half of the dopamine-producing brain cells are gone, all of us can benefit from proactive risk reduction.

Steve Blake, ScD, is part of the clinical and research faculty at Hawaii Pacific Neuroscience, and is finishing a clinical study at Hawaii Alzheimer’s Disease Center. He has presented grand rounds at John A. Burns School of Medicine at U.H. and at Boston University Medical Center. He has authored Parkinson’s Disease: Dietary Regulation of Dopamine, Vitamins and Minerals Demystified (McGraw Hill), A Nutritional Approach to Alzheimer’s Disease, Alternative Remedies (Mosby), co-authored Mosby's Drug Guide for Nurses, 4th edition, and created the Diet Doctor software to analyze dietary nutrients. He earned his ScD from the International Center for NaturoBioHolistic Health and Medicine. He lives on an organic farm on Maui with his wife Catherine. .

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jombi profile image
jombi

Invaluable information. Thank you Roy Pop!

NewHope1961 profile image
NewHope1961

Thanks! I can’t find his book re Parkinson’s on the Internet , do you know where I can get the book?

in reply toNewHope1961

drsteveblake.com/ParkinsonB... Link to His 2017 book!

n this book I outline a four-step plan for Parkinson's disease.

1) The first step is to relieve the symptoms and allow

levodopa (and tyrosine) to work more effectively.

Lowering protein intake to just what we need,

rather than the usual excess, allows our bodies to

transport both levodopa and tyrosine to the brain.

I document studies where this one change has cut symptoms in half.

2) A second step is to eat certain foods that increase

the expression of tyrosine hydroxylase to allow

more dopamine to be made inside our bodies.

Sesame tahini is one example. Have you ever

wondered how all those dopamine-producing

neurons in the brain were killed off?

3) The third approach is to identify the specific

environmental pollutants to avoid in order to

preserve the remaining dopamine-producing cells.

4) Finally, we must protect our brain cells from

further damage to ensure that there is

no further progression of Parkinson's disease.

Antioxidant and anti-inflammatory foods are the key here.

interpreters profile image
interpreters in reply to

So what is the dietary link of vitamin B1?

AmyLindy profile image
AmyLindy in reply to

Nice summary- I ordered: downloaded his book too!

AmyLindy profile image
AmyLindy in reply toAmyLindy

I asked him to address B1 in next edition- he replied : yes!

marcet profile image
marcet

Very interesting thanks

LindaP50 profile image
LindaP50

Yes!!! I have

wondered how all those dopamine-producing

neurons in the brain were killed off!

Despe profile image
Despe in reply toLindaP50

Not killed, they hibernate.

LindaP50 profile image
LindaP50 in reply toDespe

lyme hibernates. but don't believe neurons which produce dopamine hibernate.

danfitz profile image
danfitz in reply toLindaP50

Some neurologists believe that dopamine neurons go dormant but the majority believe they die. I can’t recall the percentage split between the competing views.

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