0

Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disease Center
Mitochondrial Research Affinity Collaboration-Laboratories & Engineering

Home > 0

Food Ingredients May Be As Effective As Antidepressants; Harvard-Affiliated Researchers Discover 'Mood Foods' Relieve Signs of Depression.

  • 작성자한진
  • 작성일2005-03-01 21:56:59
  • 조회수2553
  • 첨부파일첨부파일
Food Ingredients May Be As Effective As Antidepressants; Harvard-Affiliated Researchers Discover 'Mood Foods' Relieve Signs of Depression. AScribe Health News Service; 2/9/2005 Byline: McLean Hospital BELMONT, Mass., Feb. 10 (AScribe Newswire) -- Eating the right foods could have the same effect as taking traditional antidepressant medications, report researchers at Harvard-affiliated McLean Hospital. In a paper published in the Feb. 15 issue of Biological Psychiatry, a team of researchers report that omega-3 fatty acids and uridine, two naturally occurring substances in many foods, including fish, walnuts, molasses and sugar beets, prevented the development of signs of depression in rats as effectively as antidepressant drugs. "Giving rats a combination of uridine and omega-3 fatty acids produced immediate effects that were indistinguishable from those caused by giving the rats standard antidepressant medications," explains lead author of the study William Carlezon, PhD, director of McLean's Behavioral Genetics Laboratory. The results are encouraging, but shouldn't be too surprising, says co-author of the study Bruce Cohen, MD, PhD, president and psychiatrist in chief for McLean Hospital. "Cultures eating diets rich in fish with high amounts of omega-3 fatty acids tend to show a lower prevalence of major depression. Many elements of diet can affect the brain and could enhance or detract from this benefit." In the study, researchers examined how omega-3 fatty acids and uridine affected the behavior of rats exposed to stress. Normally, rats quickly develop learned helplessness behavior -- believed to reflect despair in animal models -- when tested repeatedly under stressful conditions. Rats given injections of uridine or fed a diet enriched with high amounts of omega-3 fatty acids showed fewer signs of despair than untreated rats. When given separately and then in combination, the researchers found a striking difference in the speed at which uridine and omega-3 fatty acids had their effects. While the effects of uridine were immediate, the effects of omega-3 fatty acids took a month to develop, and shorter treatments of omega-3 fatty acids alone (three to 10 days) were ineffective in relieving the signs of depression in the rats. When the rats were given the combined treatment of normally ineffective amounts of uridine and short omega-3 fatty acid treatment periods, however, beneficial effects emerged much quicker. Although the reasons for the effectiveness of these treatments are not understood, important clues are beginning to emerge. A likely possibility, says Carlezon, is that these substances target the brain's mitochondria, a microscopic energy-producing component found in all cells of the body. Mitochondria produce energy through reactions that occur on their membranes. "Omega-3 fatty acids may make the mitochondrial membranes more flexible and uridine may provide raw material to make chemical reactions occur more readily," adds co-author Perry Renshaw, MD, PhD, director of McLean's Brain Imaging Center. "These conditions would be more conducive to the production of energy, and boost communication among neurons in key areas of the brain." Evidence that the brain's mitochondria may be involved in mood and certain psychiatric conditions is accumulating rapidly. Other McLean Hospital researchers reported recently that there are dramatic alterations in mitochondrial genes within the brains of people affected with bipolar disorder, a condition that involves cycles of depression. "This work provides more evidence that our behavior -- including the selection of the foods we use to fuel our body -- can have a tremendous influence on how we feel and act," says Carlezon. "The possibility that sustained improvements in diet may have beneficial effects on mood is definitely worth closer consideration." ---- CONTACT: Adriana Bobinchock, (000)-000-0000 McLean Hospital maintains the largest research program of any private, U.S. psychiatric hospital. It is the largest psychiatric facility of Harvard Medical School, an affiliate of Massachusetts General Hospital and a member of Partners HealthCare. For more information about this study or other research being conducted at McLean Hospital, go to www.mclean.harvard.edu. COPYRIGHT 2005 AScribe
Total406 [ page14/28 ]
No. 제목 작성자 작성일 조회수
211 3D-ultrasound images of fetals 첨부파일 2006.12.01 dang van cuong 2006.12.01 1,882
210 Congratulation-Prof Han Jin (8) 2006.11.20 박원선 2006.11.20 2,222
209 Congratulation!! Cuong!! 전국과학사진공모전 입상 (3) 2006.10.24 한진 2006.10.24 2,326
208 줄기세포, 동물실험서 뇌종양 형성 2006.10.23 한진 2006.10.23 2,180
207 “체질맞춤형 의약품시대가 도래하고 있다” 2006.10.23 한진 2006.10.23 2,126
206 PGC-1 alpha implicated in Huntington's disease neurodegeneration 2006.10.22 한진 2006.10.22 5,091
205 2000년 이후 국내 연구자(제1저자 주소 기준) 생물정보학 논문분석(2006년 10월 13일 현재 기준) 2006.10.13 한진 2006.10.13 2,573
204 Heart signals give clues about potential drug toxicity 2006.10.12 한진 2006.10.12 4,990
203 항비만 식욕 억제 단백질 발견 (1) 2006.10.10 한진 2006.10.10 2,780
202 9월 생물정보학 분야 국내 연구자 논문 발표 실적 (1) 2006.10.10 한진 2006.10.10 2,517
201 Breakthrough offers new tool for studying degenerative disease 2006.10.10 한진 2006.10.10 4,823
200 Scientists Find Clue to Cell Suicides 2006.10.10 한진 2006.10.10 2,246
199 Identification of a mammalian mitochondrial porphyrin transporter 2006.10.10 한진 2006.10.10 2,603
198 Study identifies possible mechanism for brain damage in Huntington's disease 2006.10.10 한진 2006.10.10 2,386
197 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2006 (4)첨부파일 2006.10.04 한진 2006.10.04 2,415
처음 이전 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 다음 마지막