After watching this video you will find out why you shouldn’t manipulate the L Dopa bioavailability in the brain.
You are trying to balance something but you will end up messing with the same thing, in this case the Dopamine.
After watching this video you will find out why you shouldn’t manipulate the L Dopa bioavailability in the brain.
You are trying to balance something but you will end up messing with the same thing, in this case the Dopamine.
Very interesting , but what is solution ? Maybe I didn't understand it fully.
I've seen other videos by Dr Rostenberg and generally like his approach. To simplify his message: PWP's need to de-tox not only from the substances that caused the inflammatory condition in our brains in the first place, but also from the L-Dopa we are taking to alleviate our symptoms. That's why supplements, diet, exercise, and stress-reducing lifestyle choices, (which are actually important for everyone), are absolutely crucial for us PWP's. One's health becomes a full time job. I'm not complaining about it. It's just how it is.
I can't disagree with Dr Rostenburg. All these Metabolic pathways are known, but what is less known is which ones are dominant. With levodopa treatment, I agree that any overdose of levodopa or dopamine un the brain is bad for two reasons, 1) overdose stresses the synapses and causes dyskinesia, 2) we have to get rid of the waste products, the quinones that are oxidative reactants. That's why we need a stable supply of levodopa rather than a peak/trough supply which wastes much of the dopamine.
He's also right about antioxidants and anti-inflammatory agents in diet to mop up the waste products and protect the neurons. Not sure about St John's Wort though, it's a CYP3A4 inducer, so could also block levodopa getting into the blood.
Let's also consider two other things: peripheral levodopa and levodopa that goes beyond the BBB are two distinct cases. Thiamina is a powerful antioxidant for neuro cells.
My dear friend Gio ,If you check my posts you will see information about methylation.
I am lazy these days, I was hoping for a summary in sequence with things to study and do. A small manual "read and do". I would find it interesting, an eBook that I would also be willing to pay. 👍
Doing a simple Genetic testing with 23andme or AncestoryDNA is the first step to get your genome , then finding out which pathway of your methylation is blocked or not efficiently works then you can find a way to fix it.
Yes sure, but he's not aware of my research on levodopa and CYP3A4. Inducing CYP3A4 with St John's Wort is not a good idea.
Doesn’t carbidopa allow more l- dopa into the brain? By stopping it being converted in the blood? So is a smaller amount of l-dopa without carbidopa better than a larger amount with it?
LAJ12345
It’s about the events after entering synthetic LDOPA or natural Dopamine in the brain.
But by having carbidopa with the l dopa more gets into the brain meaning more dopamine in the brain. Without the carbidopa most converts in the blood and doesn’t get into the brain. So if we don’t want too much in the brain isn’t carbidopa making it worse?
I’m never sure if all of these enzymes work equally in the brain and outside of it or are they specific to different body parts?
LAJ I dont follow your reasoning here. We want levadopa in the brain not in the periphery. so we want smaller amount with carbodopa rather than large amount without. Or have I misundersatood what you are writing?
Well the whole premise of this post is that we don’t want more l dopa availability in the brain isn’t it?
So I am saying if that is correct (and I don’t know if it is) does that mean any extra l dopa we make available to the brain by adding carbidopa to it (which stops it being converted in the blood) is not doing us any good? Of course not having the carbidopa means it isn’t available to the brain as the dopamine ends up in the blood so it doesn’t provide any benefit to symptoms. It is confusing. It sounds like it’s bad to allow more into the brain as it causes damage, but unless you do you’ll have the symptoms. And if it isn’t good to allow bioavailability in the brain is it good taking it at all? Maybe I have just misunderstood the whole thing!
I just read all the comments again. It seems like it is just better to make sure the bare minimum is taken with carbidopa and spread evenly over the day? That way there is no excess in the brain but none wasted by converting in the blood?
And if you have a fast mao a and mao b enzyme and fast COMT(lower dopamine) activity?Does that mean no dopamine sticks around long?
Having fast COMT or MAO means that you destroy the neurotransmitters faster.