Both Dr. Lonsdale and Dr. Chandler Marrs speak a lot about "refeeding syndrome" when supplementing with a vitamin B1 dose that's just too high.
This comes into conflict with the instructions from Dr. Constantini. So, it got me wondering.
According to what I've been reading, the goal of HDT (High dose thiamine therapy) is to find the correct dose for your body. Going higher than this dose causes an increase in symptoms, requiring you to stop HDT and start again a few days later at a lower dose.
Correct?
However, the Doctors I referred to in the beginning, when discussing this same phenomenon -- getting worse when you take too much vitamin B1 -- state that this worsening is actually a sign of how much your body really needs B1.
This would be similar to what happens when giving magnesium to a severely magnesium-depleted person.
They specifically state that in some people this worsening will last for weeks, while in others it may last for several months. It can get horrible, but, if properly supported will eventually subside.
Hence the name "refeeding syndrome".
To give you some background, the concept of refeeding syndrome refers to people that have been starving for a long time -- think people imprisoned in Nazi concentration camps -- and that, suddenly, are given all the nutrients they need. Instead of getting better, some will die:
"Abnormal heart rhythms are the most common cause of death from refeeding syndrome, with other significant risks including confusion, coma and convulsions and cardiac failure."
How come?
Their body is simply unable to adapt to all that nutrition because it needs nutrients to use up nutrients.
Apparently, something similar is happening when supplementing with vitamin B1.
Since vitamin B1 is so important for so many processes, a very high-dose of vitamin B1 can overwhelm the system.
For this reason, Dr. Londsdale will supplement his vitamin B1 therapy with, at least, a good multivitamin (with a generous amount of B-complex vitamins) and magnesium. Then, when there's a worsening of symptoms this is seen as a requirement to lower the dose but, and this is where the difference lays, with the understanding that the worsening means you needed that vitamin B1.
The main points I got were these:
When you take too much vitamin B1 you shouldn't feel it.
If a healthy body needs 2 mg and the person takes 2000 mg, his healthy body will make use of the 2 mg and expel the remaining 1998 mg trough the excretory pathways -- urine, sweat, etc.
However, if I'm severely depleted, my body will want to make use of as much vitamin B1 as he can get his hands into.
Then, since vitamin B1 is responsible for activating a lot of processes that have been dormant, or sluggish, for ages, there will be a sudden surge of all kinds of requests from all parts of the body demanding more nutrients from its reserves.
Now, if a person as been severely deficient in vitamin B1 for ages, chances are that he'll also be deficient in many other nutrients.
So, how is a body to keep up with the demand? It can't.
This causes a cascade of reactions.
So, based on these permisses, I ask:
-- What if people with Parkinson's that get worse on HDT are actually going through some form of refeeding syndrome?
If that's the case, then we'll have 3 possible outcomes for someone taking thiamine:
1. He doesn't feel anything.
--> This means one of two things:
1.1. - He's taking too little vitamin B1. He needs to take more.
1.2. - His body isn't B1 deficient and is just excreting the excess B1. This person will never feel a thing, even if he takes 7 grams of B1.
2. He feels better.
--> This means his body needed that B1. He had sufficient nutrients in his reserves to keep up with the incoming cellular demand caused by the sudden surge of thiamine. Now one of 2 things are true:
2.1. He doesn't need to increase his dosage and will eventually feel all the benefits at the current dose.
2.2. He needs to increase the dose to further benefit.
3. He feels worse.
--> This means his body wants to use that B1 but is unable to do so because some of the co-factors are not available. Also, as these co-factors are being used up, the body is feeling the side effects caused by their deficiency.
In this case, he will take 2 different paths depending on how he interprets this worsening:
3.1. Stop B1, allow some time for their symptoms to get back to baseline, and restart at a lower dose and become afraid of going high again.
3.2. Recognize his body is unable to use all that B1 -- even though he needs it. Restart at a lower dose, taking in B1 co-factors and any other nutrients he may be deficient in. Slowly increase the dosage.
If this is correct, then one would expect that people with a nutrient-rich diet would tend to tolerate higher doses of vitamin B1.
One would also be able to postulate that the worse you get with B1 supplementation, the more you stand to gain from its supplementation.
Hope this makes sense.
What do you think?