So improper diet and too much junk food and Pepsi maybe mixed with drugs
- tell me this kid at Santana - note the prosecutors backing off now -
he was the patsy, no mother really, for she was not overly concerned
with this child - essentially he seemed all alone.

Had he had proper diet - maybe something as simple as this - you can eat
a banana and potato and get the same (or is that potatoe) serotonin
levels increased and sunshine and good lights are part of this stuff to
do with neuroransmitters.

Oh but we have the Sirhans's of the world, the Manson Family - drugged
up until a mentor takes control for if you do not control your own
children, someone else will.......

The title of the story Serotonin and Judgment is appropriate for this
item.........did you know that prolonged use of the common aspirin leads
to blood dyscrasias (altered condition of blood leading to cancer),
degeneration of the heart muscle, abolition of WILLPOWER and this was
known in 1930?    Also people with kidney problems were dying from use
of aspirin -
So if a tiny little pill like an aspirin through prolonged use can kill
- why do we permit organied crime and now the schools to give little
elementary children drugs - such as Ritilin?

Wonder what the kids at Littleton ate that day and this kid from
California - did he have a good breakfast?  Fresh fruits and
vegetables....an apple a day keeps the doctor away, but a banana and
potato a day keeps the the-rapits (therapists) away.....who long for the
chance to gain a control over any child for that is big bucks....Clinton
style - lots of dark mirrors into which some do not see - only but
darkly?>

What is worse this is nothing new - there is a control out there making
asassins out of the kids.......refer to Manson and then ask, who was his
Mentor?  Two followers with fathers in Nasa and Pentagon - and this
Bundy had my neice on his murder hit list when she lived in Florida?
Her father was former Joint Chief and at Red Stone Arsenal as last
assignment?

Who is getting their hook in these kids - take a good look at the FBI -
remember Littleton, the son of ann FBI Agent made the videon in advance
of the deed......and KGB sat in FBI for 16 years while FreeH and
Alblright broke bread with KGB.....the enemy is within - and their
target "  - to engage children in sodomy and destroy their character and
morals setting up for death by AIDS.

Perhaps if every kid started the day with a good breakfast - next thing
you know it will be Fluoride in the Pepsi?

Saba


 Full size image available below
  Serotonin and Judgment
Depression can hit at any age. More than the blues, the overall feeling
of doom can trigger some people to kill themselves. Researchers now are
looking at this behavior from a new angle. Studies show that low levels
of the brain chemical serotonin can in part lead to an overall
insensitivity to future consequences, setting off impulsive and
aggressive behaviors and perhaps culminating in suicide. By selectively
restoring the chemicals' activity researchers hope to prevent
destructive behavior as well as head off suicide -- the eighth leading
cause of death in the U.S.
      Grades are posted. Alex . . . 98 percent. Pam ... 85
percent. Nick...91 percent. Your grade? 20 percent. You're upset so you
talk to your teacher to find out where you went wrong.
      But what if your feelings went out of control? You rip
up the posted mid-term grades and glare at your teacher as you exit the
classroom. In the days that follow you experience overwhelming feelings
of sadness and thoughts of ending your life.
      Why would a person behave one way rather than another?
For years, scientists have agreed that some behavior flaws can arise
from environmental influences including how your parents raised you or
from a traumatic life crisis such as the death of a loved one. Now a
growing body of evidence suggests that a chemical dubbed serotonin
(ser-oh-TOE-nin) also may play a part. Some scientists believe that low
activity of the chemical in the brain can lead to an underlying
inability to handle powerful feelings, which can result in impulsive
acts, aggressive behaviors and suicidal tendencies.
This new line of research may lead to:
The use of brain imaging techniques for identifying those who may be
impulsively aggressive or suicidal.
A method to monitor the serotonin medications given to suicidal
depressed patients.
New insights on the mechanisms of serotonin.
     Serotonin is one of a group of chemical messengers known
as neurotransmitters that carry out communication in the brain and body.
The message molecules flow from a nerve cell or neuron onto other
neurons that act as receivers. There, they attach to a distinctly shaped
area on the neuron called a receptor site. This union, which is like a
key fitting into a lock, triggers signals that either allow the message
to be passed on to other cells or prevent the message from being
forwarded. Since the discovery of serotonin in the 1950s, researchers
are finding evidence that one of its roles is to mediate emotions and
judgment.
      For example, in animal studies, scientists discovered
that low serotonin levels may be associated with impulsive or risky
behavior. Researchers observed monkeys and found that the ones who took
more dangerous leaps traveling from tree to tree had lower serotonin
levels and more injuries from falling. Other scientists examined rats
and found the ones with low serotonin levels chose a small immediate
reward instead of waiting for a bigger prize.
      Scientists also have compiled studies that show
serotonin is implicated in aggressive acts. One example involves mice
who lack one type of receptor that responds to serotonin. These
defective mice attack intruders faster and more intensely. Other
researchers examined the spinal fluid of murderers in Finland. Their
results indicate that these individuals have abnormally low levels of
serotonin.
      Some researchers now believe that suicide may be the
ultimate act of inwardly directed impulsive aggression.
      In one new area of research, scientists are examining
humans with brain imaging techniques and believe defects in serotonin
processing are partially responsible for suicidal behavior. Preliminary
results show that depressed people who have attempted suicide exhibit
lower serotonin activity (see brain images) in response to a drug that
boosts the amount of the chemical in the brain. In addition, the
depressed had a history of comitting impulsive acts including overeating
and aggressive behaviors such as lighting fires or fighting.
      Scientists plan to uncover the brain areas where
serotonin's inactivity causes the most havoc and identify all the
components that play a role in the defective processing. Researchers
view the brain in action with a special imaging technique called
positron emission tomography (pet). These pet scans compare the brain
activity of a severely depressed patient (left) to a healthy volunteer
(right). Both people received a drug called fenfluramine that is known
to increase the availability of serotonin in the brain. The scans
demonstrate that only the healthy patient has an increase in serotonin
activity, which is represented by the orange and yellow shading. This
suggests that the severely depressed have a very blunted response to the
neurotransmitter or very low serotonin levels. Researchers plan to use
the technology to devise imaging guidelines that would identify patients
with this deficiency.

 J. John Mann, Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center
Society members may submit relevant current  research references for
consideration to list with this article. Please mail materials to Leah
Ariniello, Science Writer, Society for Neuroscience, 11 Dupont Circle,
NW, Suite 500, Washington D.C. 20036. Please include a full copy of the
paper.
 Copyright © 1997 Society for Neuroscience. All rights reserved. No
portion of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval
system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without permission of
the Society for Neuroscience.






http://www.sfn.org/briefings/serotonin.html


Reply via email to