Main article: Managing mental symptoms
Main article: Managing mental symptoms
The symptoms of mental immmunopathology include apathy, sluggishness, cognitive dysfunction (brain fog), feeling paralyzed by misery, anxiety and depression. Managing these symptoms of microbial die-off is a challenge, particularly when those symptoms are mental. For example, mental immunopathology can be difficult to recognize as such.
There are variety of ways to limit the discomfort of mental symptoms on the Marshall Protocol. These include restricting light, taking antidepressants or anti-anxiety medications, and seeking out social and family support. Patients have also reported that a proper, if not always cheerful, attitude has allowed them to do the MP safely and effectively.
Looking out for friends and loved ones is an important part of preventing suicide. You can call to speak with a crisis worker on behalf of someone you are concerned about. The crisis workers have access to local resources, and can help you identify ways to get help to your loved ones.
To find out more about the difference you can make in a friend or loved one's life, visit What If Someone I Know Needs Help.
Light restriction is often important. Even if patient has no obvious symptoms of light sensitivity, exposure to strong or fluorescent light may affect brain for some days, sometimes starting a few days after exposure.
Related article: Optic nerve connection
The existence of a blood-brain barrier has been historically touted as a reason why microbes could not possibly have caused any number of neurological diseases. However, with the accumulation of additional evidence, this concept has progressively lost meaning. An increasing number of studies show microbes persist in the brain and affect health.
Many chronic mental diseases are inflammatory conditions. As such, it seems like they are driven by the same pathogenesis as the rest of the body. This means that an activated immune response on an immunostimulatory therapy such as the Marshall ProtocolA curative medical treatment for chronic inflammatory disease. Based on the Marshall Pathogenesis. will elicit mental symptoms.
This article presents a broad overview of the role microbes may play in causing and driving mental and neurological conditions. However, the Knowledge Base contains more in-depth articles on the following mental and neurological diseases and symptoms:
When patients on the MP kill bacterial pathogens, they experience a reaction called immunopathologyA temporary increase in disease symptoms experienced by Marshall Protocol patients that results from the release of cytokines and endotoxins as disease-causing bacteria are killed.. Immunopathology is an increase in one's present symptoms of Th1 inflammationThe complex biological response of vascular tissues to harmful stimuli such as pathogens or damaged cells. It is a protective attempt by the organism to remove the injurious stimuli as well as initiate the healing process for the tissue., or a return of previous Th1 inflammatory symptoms, that is caused largely by cytokinesAny of various protein molecules secreted by cells of the immune system that serve to regulate the immune system. generated by the immune response and endotoxins released from dying bacteria.
Like physical symptoms, mental symptoms such as anxiety, depression, cognitive dysfunctionThe loss of intellectual functions such as reasoning; memory loss; and other neurological abilities that is severe enough to interfere with daily functioning. (brain fogThe loss of intellectual functions such as reasoning; memory loss; and other neurological abilities that is severe enough to interfere with daily functioning.), insomnia and apathy are exacerbated during effective treatment with the MP.
Doctors should understand is that in the case of nearly every patient, immunopathology occurs in the brain. This means that during much of the treatment, patients are not thinking properly and have psychological issues. These mental reactions should not cause doctors to question the stability of the patient, but instead it should be understood that every patient will experience a certain level of confusion, anxiety and neurological symptoms while on the MP.
Greg Blaney, MD
At least one early study has suggested that olmesartanMedication taken regularly by patients on the Marshall Protocol for its ability to activate the Vitamin D Receptor. Also known by the trade name Benicar. is neuroprotective. A 2002 in vitroA technique of performing a given procedure in a controlled environment outside of a living organism - usually a laboratory. study by Iwasaki et al. found that olmesartan improved regrowth of neurons in cultures of ventral spinal cord. On this basis, the team concluded that olmesartan has promise in treating diseases that involve degeneration and death of motor neurons, such as motor neuropathy and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.1)
The existence of a blood-brain barrier has been historically touted as a reason why microbes could not possibly have caused any number of neurological diseases. However, with the accumulation of additional evidence, this concept has progressively lost meaning.
A range of bacteria and bacterial toxins… establish intimate interactions with endothelial cells [cells that comprise the membrane], triggering inflammatory responses and coagulation processes and modifying endothelial cell plasma membranes and junctions to adhere to their surfaces and then invade, cross and even disrupt the endothelial barrier.
E. Lemichez et al., Breaking the wall: targeting of the endothelium by pathogenic bacteria 4)
One prominent example of a microbe that passes the blood-brain barrier is Borrelia.5)
The brain immune system, which consists mainly of astrocytes, microglia and infiltrating immune cells, is quiescent normally, but it is activated in response to pathophysiological events such as ischemia, trauma, inflammation and infection. 6)
Mast cells are located in close proximity to the vasculature, and vasoactive mediators released upon their activation can promote endothelial activation leading to blood brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction. 7)
According to John Bienenstock of McMaster University, “Bacteria and bacterial products can clearly have an effect on the brain and pathways leading to the brain” while Knight, Gordon, and Turnbaugh have concluded the following:
One of the striking features of a variety of neuropsychiatric diseases (e.g., affective disorders) is their variance, with differences observed across individuals in terms of their susceptibility, in the combination of systems that are disturbed, and in the therapeutic and adverse responses to various medications. [We put forth] the possibility that the microbiome represents a source of this observed variance.
A. Gonzalez, The mind-body-microbial continuum8)
The following offers the evidence to support such statements:
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Other evidence includes:
Infection and inflammation lead to changes in mood and cognition. Although the “classic” sickness behavior syndrome, involving fatigue, social withdrawal, and loss of appetites are most familiar, other emotional responses accompany immune activation, including anxiety. Recent studies have shown that gastrointestinal bacterial infections lead to enhanced anxiety-like behavior in mice. The bacteria-induced signal is most likely carried by vagal sensory neurons, and occurs early on (within 6h) during the infection. These signals induce evidence of activation in brain regions that integrate viscerosensory information with mood, and potentiate activation in brain regions established as key players in fear and anxiety.
L.E. Goehler et al.23)
The 100 trillion bacteria which together make up the intestinal microbiome are engaged in all the complex interactions with each other and the local tissue and in a balanced manner maintain normal homeostasis. They synthesize a vast array of biologically and neuroactive molecules including an almost complete array of neurotransmitters such as GABA, and through fermentation, a panoply of short chain fatty acids all of which have known and unknown effects on the nervous system. The direct and indirect effects of the intestinal microbiome on the intestinal epithelium, the local mucosal immune system and their cytokines, as well as the enteric nervous system, conspire to affect the afferent neuronal pathways to the brain. In turn, through complex interactional effects upon the HPA axis and especially central nervous system target structures affected by tractus solitarius activation in the brain stem, increasing evidence is pointing towards an influence by the intestinal microbiotaThe bacterial community which causes chronic diseases - one which almost certainly includes multiple species and bacterial forms. upon cognition and mood.24)
Collectively, the human gut microbiome contributes 36% of the small molecules that are found in human blood.25)
The surprisingly high compositional variation in gut bacteria across individuals stands in stark contrast to the small amount of genetic diversity uncovered in the sequencing of our human genomes.26) Differences in our microbial communities may thus be one of the most important factors in differences in the metabolites that individuals extract from similar diets.
2018 electron microscope study bacteria-in-your-brain
Related article: Psychosomatic explanations for disease
Sigmund Freud and Jean-Martin Charcot were born 150 years ago, but their ideas about the effect of the subconscious on disease continue to resonate in the scientific community.27) Freud and colleagues argued that unconscious mental processes such as sublimated rage could manifest as physical symptoms. However, with the advent of superior technology, one by one, many diseases once supposed to be caused by psychological stress have since been attributed to other factors including infections.
According to the Marshall PathogenesisA description for how chronic inflammatory diseases originate and develop., chronic fatigue syndrome, multiple chemical sensitivity and other chronic inflammatory diseases are likely caused by pathogens, yet many physicians consider these diseases to be “medically unexplained.” Medically unexplained diseases are widely prevalent28) but at the same time have few discernible markers or objectively measurable symptoms. While a lot of Freudian ideas have fallen out of favor, one legacy remains: difficult-to-explain diseases are still routinely attributed to psychological causes. The process by which patients supposedly manifest psychological problems as a disease has been named and renamed, classified and reclassified: hysteria, psychosomatic disorder, somatoform disorder, conversion disorder, functional disorder, etc. In each of these diagnoses, however, the stated origin of disease is unchanged: symptoms that cannot be explained are ultimately “all in a patient's head.”
While there is no denying the existence of some sort of “mind-body connection,” there is minimal compelling evidence that as the 19th century Swiss physician Georg W. Groddeck claimed: “Illness has a purpose; it has to resolve the conflict, to repress it, or to prevent what is already repressed from entering consciousness.”29) Despite the stark absence of evidence supporting these views, it is not unusual to read papers describing how patients with long-term so-called psychological illnesses may be subconsciously manifesting them, because it would allow them to have more “care, attention, disengagement, or even financial benefits.”30) Nor, is it uncommon for new theories to spring up along these lines. In one example, a 2008 continuing medical education publication taught physicians that when a celebrity becomes ill, healthy people are suggestible enough to develop long-term illnesses consistent with the celebrity's descriptions of their conditions. Such claims are recklessly speculative, harming patients and stalling needed research.
Treating patients who complain of so-called medically unexplained symptoms with cognitive behavioral therapy or, in the case of chronic fatigue syndrome, graded exercise therapy, may do more harm than good.31) The emergence of metagenomic technologies offers a more sophisticated set of tools for detecting and characterizing microbes in these disease states. Perhaps it is only the use of this technology that will finally relegate the notion of patient as attention-seeking victim to historical relic.
I have nooooooooo incentive but yet I don't feel depressed. I just feel like my brain has shut down. Also, I am having more difficulty finding the right words. Been having trouble sleeping lately.
Sometimes (when I talk faster than my brain is working) I stutter. I never used to stutter and have always been a good speaker. Sometimes I will stop what I'm saying mid-sentence because I forget what I was saying or the effort of completing the sentence or thought (by finding the right words and putting things in the right sequence) just seems too exhausting. I often will start talking and then say “oh never mind.” This irritates people after a while.
This teacher explained how the amygdala part of the brain is like the “guard shack” that everything has to get past before it is processed by the rest of the brain. And if the amygdala is on heightened alert, then we “forget to act like ourselves.”
So, if we are in “threat mode” we will act uncharacteristically immature emotionally. We will be responding to others in a self-preservation orientation, when usually we are more than happy to be considerate of others (along with other more mature behaviors).
Joyful, MarshallProtocol.com
I'm at 3.5 years on the MP and frankly cannot believe some of the changes in my mind…. I know that there is still a long way to go, but some of the clarity of mind and equanimity I experience now… it's just astonishing.
And I have tried many of the other 'options' before the MP (for my anxiety and depression) - CBT, psychoanalysis, antidepressants, meditation. All except psychoanalysis definitely gave some benefit. But when I compare them to what I am experiencing now, I would describe them more as management tools and giving symptomatic relief.
What I am experiencing now through the MP absolutely different. I could not conceive of this state of mind before, that it could exist. It is tricky because it is like trying to describe colour to someone who is blind. I read posts like this (i.e. the one I'm writing now) when I was sicker and was cynical and doubtful. I doubt I would have believed it if I hadn't gone through it myself.
The candy is definitely multiplying for me.
Keep hanging in there!
K, MarshallProtocol.com