Guest guest Posted May 1, 2004 Report Share Posted May 1, 2004 Sulfur is part of the GSH molecule. If your son reacts to epsom salt baths and to GSH, he may indeed be a candidate for caution when contemplating sulfur-containing whatevers. The search glutathione[ti] AND (sulfur OR sulphur) generated a number of citations, from which a smattering is presented hereinbelow. Cites 2, 4, 5 may be the most relevant for CSB folks. No profound lessons therein, but certainly informative tidbits about GSH. noahparthasmom wrote: and Dr. McCandless, Thank you so much for answering my question. We plan on starting B-12 injections at our next DAN visit (May 30) so we'll probably put the GSH on hold until after the salts. It figures that my son would be in the 20% that can't handle GSH. , your email got me thinking - does GSH contain sulfur? I'm really naive about all of this, but my son has a similar reaction to epsom salt baths. There's no pain, but he becomes a live wire and is unable to sleep after an epsom salt bath. He gets so hyper with even 1/4 cup and stays up all night tossing and turning. I don't know if there's a connection or not. The info you sent looks really interesting. Thank you so much for sending it. glutathione[ti] AND (sulfur OR sulphur) 1: Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2004 Apr 9;316(3):749-52. Polymorphisms of glutathione S-transferase M1 and T1 modulate blood pressure of individuals chronically exposed to natural sour gas containing sulfur compounds. Saadat M, Bahaoddini A, Mohabatkar H. Department of Biology, College of Sciences, Shiraz University, Shiraz 71454, Iran. saadat@... In order to find the effect of genetic polymorphisms of GSTM1 and GSTT1 on blood pressure of individuals chronically exposed to sulfur compounds, the present study was done. Study subjects (38 males, 38 females) were residents of contaminated areas of Masjid-i-Sulaiman (southwest of Iran). The GSTM1 and GSTT1 genotypes were determined using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based method. The non-parametric Sign test was applied in order to detect differences between the GSTs genotypes of study subjects and the normal mean values according to the sex and age of subjects. From four combination of genotypes, systolic blood pressure significantly decreased in combination of null-GSTM1 and present-GSTT1 (Z=-2.41; P=0.016), and diastolic blood pressure significantly increased in combination of present-GSTM1 and null-GSTT1 (Z=+2.14; P=0.032). It is speculated about polymorphisms of GSTs in individuals chronically exposed to natural sour gas, which contains H2S, fulfilling a physiological role(s) in regulating blood pressure. PMID: 15033463 [PubMed - in process] 2: Int J Vitam Nutr Res. 2003 Nov;73(6):468-77. The effect of graded levels of dietary casein, with or without methionine supplementation, on glutathione concentration in unstressed and endotoxin-treated rats. Alhamdan AA, Grimble RF. Institute of Human Nutrition, University of Southampton, Southampton SO16 7PX, UK. dr_Alhamdan@... Glutathione (GSH) concentration was measured in rats fed either graded levels of dietary casein (experiment 1; 180 g, 120 g, 80 g, or 60 g protein/kg diet) or graded levels of dietary casein, supplemented with methionine to equalize dietary sulfur amino acid content to that seen in an 180 g/kg casein diet supplemented with 0.3 g L-methionine/kg diet (experiment 2; 180 g protein +0.3 g L-methionine, 80 g protein +6.70 g L-methionine, or 60 g protein +7.45 g L-methionine/kg diet). Rats were given an inflammatory challenge by intraperitoneal injection of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide from Escherichia coli), and were compared with ad libitum and pair-fed controls. Glutathione concentration in various organs (liver, lung, spleen, and thymus) decreased in animals fed the low-protein diets (80 g or 60 g/kg diet). Addition of the sulfur amino acid, methionine, to the low-protein diets restored glutathione concentrations in animals fed ad libitum and prevented the fall in GSH concentration, which occurred in lung, spleen, and thymus in response to the endotoxin. Despite the similarity in the amount of sulfur amino acid consumed between the groups fed the 180 g protein +0.3 g L-methionine and the 60 g protein +7.45 g L-methionine/kg diet, in experiment 2, hepatic GSH concentration significantly increased in the latter group, in animals fed ad libitum and in the endotoxin-treated animals, but not in the pair-fed controls. PMID: 14743552 [PubMed - in process] 3: Biochemistry. 2004 Jan 20;43(2):352-61. Parallel evolutionary pathways for glutathione transferases: structure and mechanism of the mitochondrial class kappa enzyme rGSTK1-1. Ladner JE, Parsons JF, Rife CL, Gilliland GL, Armstrong RN. The Center for Advanced Research in Biotechnology of the land Biotechnology Institute and the National Institutes of Standards and Technology, Gudelsky Drive, Rockville, land 20850, USA. The class kappa glutathione (GSH) transferase is an enzyme that resides in the mitochondrial matrix. Its relationship to members of the canonical GSH transferase superfamily has remained an enigma. The three-dimensional structure of the class kappa enzyme from rat (rGSTK1-1) in complex with GSH has been solved by single isomorphous replacement with anomalous scattering at a resolution of 2.5 A. The structure reveals that the enzyme is more closely related to the protein disulfide bond isomerase, dsbA, from Escherichia coli than it is to members of the canonical superfamily. The structures of rGSTK1-1 and the canonical superfamily members indicate that the proteins folds have diverged from a common thioredoxin/glutaredoxin progenitor but did so by different mechanisms. The mitochondrial enzyme, therefore, represents a fourth protein superfamily that supports GSH transferase activity. The thioredoxin domain functions in a manner that is similar to that seen in the canonical enzymes by providing key structural elements for the recognition of GSH. The hydroxyl group of S16 is within hydrogen-bonding distance of the sulfur of bound GSH and is, in part, responsible for the ionization of the thiol in the E*GSH complex (pKa = 6.4 +/- 0.1). Preequilibrium kinetic experiments indicate that the k(on) for GSH is 1 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) and k(off) for GS- is approximately 8 s(-1) and relatively slow with respect to turnover with 1-chloro-2, 4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). As a result, the KM(GSH) (11 mM) is much larger than the apparent Kd(GSH) (90 microM). The active site has a relatively open access channel that is flanked by disordered loops that may explain the relatively high turnover number (280 s(-1) at pH 7.0) toward CDNB. The disordered loops form an extensive contiguous patch on one face of the dimeric enzyme, a fact that suggests that the protein surface may interact with a membrane or other protein partner. PMID: 14717589 [PubMed - in process] 4: Carcinogenesis. 2004 Mar;25(3):359-67. Epub 2003 Nov 21. Selective expression of glutathione S-transferase genes in the murine gastrointestinal tract in response to dietary organosulfur compounds. Andorfer JH, Tchaikovskaya T, Listowsky I. Department of Biochemistry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, NY 10461, USA. A short-term feeding regimen was designed to analyze the effects of compounds such as diallyl disulfide (DADS), diallylthiosulfinate (allicin) from garlic and butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) on glutathione S-transferase (GST) expression in the gastrointestinal tract and liver of male mice. After animals were force-fed these compounds, tissue GSTs were purified and individual subunits resolved by HPLC and identified on the basis of mass spectrometry (ESI MS) and immunoreactivity data. The effects of DADS and allicin on GST expression were especially prominent in stomach and small intestine, where there were major coordinate changes in GST subunit profiles. In particular, the transcripts of the mGSTM1 and mGSTM4 genes, which share large segments of common 5'-flanking sequences, and their corresponding subunits were selectively induced. Levels of alpha class subunits also increased, whereas mGSTM3 and mGSTP1 were not affected. The inducible mGSTA5 and non-responsive mGSTM3 subunits had not been identified previously. Liver and colon GSTs were also affected to a lesser extent, but this short-term feeding regimen had no effect on GST subunit patterns from other organs, including heart, brain and testis. Real-time PCR (TaqMan) methods were used for quantitative estimations of relative amounts of the mRNAs encoding the GSTs. Effects on the transcripts generally paralleled changes at the protein level, for the most part, however, the greatest relative increases were observed for those mRNAs that were expressed at low abundance constituitively. Mechanisms by which the organosulfur compounds operate to affect GST transcription could involve reversible modification of certain protein sulfhydryl groups, shifts in reduced glutathione/oxidized glutathione ratios and resultant changes in cellular redox status. PMID: 14633659 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] 5: Nutr Cancer. 2001;40(2):205-10. Relative activities of organosulfur compounds derived from onions and garlic in increasing tissue activities of quinone reductase and glutathione transferase in rat tissues. Munday R, Munday CM. Ruakura Agricultural Research Centre, Hamilton, New Zealand. rex.munday@... There is evidence that onions and garlic protect against cancer in humans. It has been suggested that this effect is due to the organosulfur compounds in these vegetables and that these substances act through induction of phase II detoxification enzymes. In the present studies, we have compared the ability of diallyl sulfide, dially disulfide, and diallyl trisulfide, compounds that are derived from garlic, to increase the activity of the phase II enzymes quinone reductase and glutathione transferase in a variety of rat tissues. We have also examined the onion-derived substances, dipropyl sulfide, dipropyl disulfide, dipropenyl sulfide, and dipropenyl disulfide, under identical conditions. Diallyl trisulfide and diallyl disulfide were potent inducers of the phase II enzymes. Dipropenyl disulfide was much less active, while little effect on enzyme activity was seen in animals dosed with dipropyl disulfide. Diallyl sulfide and dipropyl sulfide were weak inducers of quinone reductase and glutathione transferase, but dipropenyl sulfide was very active, with an effect similar to that of diallyl disulfide. It is possible that diallyl disulfide and diallyl trisulfide are important in the anticancer action of garlic, while dipropenyl sulfide could be involved in the beneficial action of onions. PMID: 11962257 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] 6: Nutr Neurosci. 2001;4(3):213-22. Sulfur amino acid deficiency depresses brain glutathione concentration. Paterson PG, Lyon AW, Kamencic H, Andersen LB, Juurlink BH. College of Pharmacy and Nutrition, Cameco Multiple Sclerosis and Neuroscience Research Center, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada. phyllis.paterson@... Dietary sulfur amino acid content is a major determinant of glutathione concentration in some tissues. We examined whether brain glutathione (GSH), a key component of antioxidant defense important for minimizing ischemic injury, was also responsive to short-term sulfur amino acid deficiency. Female Long- adult rats were fed a sulfur-deficient L-amino acid defined diet for five days; the control diet was supplemented with L-cystine and L-methionine (n = 6). Sulfur amino acid deficiency was confirmed by a reduction in liver cysteine and GSH concentrations, marked decreases in food intake, and weight loss. GSH concentration analyzed by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography was significantly depressed in the neocortex and thalamus of deficient rats. Brain cysteine was not decreased in a parallel manner. Classical glutathione peroxidase activity was increased in the liver and brain of sulfur amino acid deficient rats. This suggests an upregulation of antioxidant defense but these findings may be complicated by alterations in tissue composition. The depletion of brain GSH by a reduced supply of dietary precursors may be important during brain ischemia when the rate of GSH utilization and the need for synthesis are increased. PMID: 11842890 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] 7: Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2002 Jan;5(1):85-92. Comment in: Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2002 Jan;5(1):43-5. Redox control of the transsulfuration and glutathione biosynthesis pathways. Deplancke B, Gaskins HR. Division of Nutritional Sciences, Department of Animal Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1207 W. Drive, Urbana, IL 61801, USA. Intracellular reduction-oxidation status is increasingly recognized as a primary regulator of cellular growth and development. The relative reduction-oxidation state of the cell depends primarily on the precise balance between concentrations of reactive oxygen species and the cysteine-dependent antioxidant thiol buffers glutathione and thioredoxin, which by preferentially reacting with reactive oxygen species, protect other intracellular molecules from oxidative damage. The transsulfuration pathway constitutes the major route of cysteine biosynthesis, and may thus be central in controlling the intracellular reduction-oxidation state and the balance between self-renewal and differentiation programs. This review discusses new findings on reciprocal reduction-oxidation modulation of enzymes involved in the transsulfuration and glutathione biosynthesis pathways, as well as studies elucidating the impact of sulfur amino acid availability on these pathways. Publication Types: Review Review, Tutorial PMID: 11790955 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 1, 2004 Report Share Posted May 1, 2004 , Wow, another sulfur kid. We may be on to a small sub-type here. Test #2 indicates the importance of the amino acid interaction with GSH. I think I finally understand this after hearing Jill . I look forward to finally getting the amino acid test at the end of May. Maybe there will be some clues there. One puzzling thing is that test #2 added methione, a sulfur amino acid, to raise GSH. I would bet money our son needs that, but I would think the sulfur part of it could be a problem. Am I confusing Sulfur with Sulfa again??? Also, could you please state the conclusion of this test in terms I might understand. Thank you for sticking with this issue. L 2: Int J Vitam Nutr Res. 2003 Nov;73(6):468-77. The effect of graded levels of dietary casein, with or without methionine supplementation, on glutathione concentration in unstressed and endotoxin-treated rats. Alhamdan AA, Grimble RF. Institute of Human Nutrition, University of Southampton, Southampton SO16 7PX, UK. dr_Alhamdan@... Glutathione (GSH) concentration was measured in rats fed either graded levels of dietary casein (experiment 1; 180 g, 120 g, 80 g, or 60 g protein/kg diet) or graded levels of dietary casein, supplemented with methionine to equalize dietary sulfur amino acid content to that seen in an 180 g/kg casein diet supplemented with 0.3 g L-methionine/kg diet (experiment 2; 180 g protein +0.3 g L-methionine, 80 g protein +6.70 g L-methionine, or 60 g protein +7.45 g L-methionine/kg diet). Rats were given an inflammatory challenge by intraperitoneal injection of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide from Escherichia coli), and were compared with ad libitum and pair-fed controls. Glutathione concentration in various organs (liver, lung, spleen, and thymus) decreased in animals fed the low-protein diets (80 g or 60 g/kg diet). Addition of the sulfur amino acid, methionine, to the low-protein diets restored glutathione concentrations in animals fed ad libitum and prevented the fall in GSH concentration, which occurred in lung, spleen, and thymus in response to the endotoxin. Despite the similarity in the amount of sulfur amino acid consumed between the groups fed the 180 g protein +0.3 g L-methionine and the 60 g protein +7.45 g L-methionine/kg diet, in experiment 2, hepatic GSH concentration significantly increased in the latter group, in animals fed ad libitum and in the endotoxin-treated animals, but not in the pair-fed controls. PMID: 14743552 [PubMed - in process] 3: Biochemistry. 2004 Jan 20;43(2):352-61. Parallel evolutionary pathways for glutathione transferases: structure and mechanism of the mitochondrial class kappa enzyme rGSTK1-1. Ladner JE, Parsons JF, Rife CL, Gilliland GL, Armstrong RN. The Center for Advanced Research in Biotechnology of the land Biotechnology Institute and the National Institutes of Standards and Technology, Gudelsky Drive, Rockville, land 20850, USA. The class kappa glutathione (GSH) transferase is an enzyme that resides in the mitochondrial matrix. Its relationship to members of the canonical GSH transferase superfamily has remained an enigma. The three-dimensional structure of the class kappa enzyme from rat (rGSTK1-1) in complex with GSH has been solved by single isomorphous replacement with anomalous scattering at a resolution of 2.5 A. The structure reveals that the enzyme is more closely related to the protein disulfide bond isomerase, dsbA, from Escherichia coli than it is to members of the canonical superfamily. The structures of rGSTK1-1 and the canonical superfamily members indicate that the proteins folds have diverged from a common thioredoxin/glutaredoxin progenitor but did so by different mechanisms. The mitochondrial enzyme, therefore, represents a fourth protein superfamily that supports GSH transferase activity. The thioredoxin domain functions in a manner that is similar to that seen in the canonical enzymes by providing key structural elements for the recognition of GSH. The hydroxyl group of S16 is within hydrogen-bonding distance of the sulfur of bound GSH and is, in part, responsible for the ionization of the thiol in the E*GSH complex (pKa = 6.4 +/- 0.1). Preequilibrium kinetic experiments indicate that the k(on) for GSH is 1 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) and k(off) for GS- is approximately 8 s(-1) and relatively slow with respect to turnover with 1-chloro-2, 4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). As a result, the KM(GSH) (11 mM) is much larger than the apparent Kd(GSH) (90 microM). The active site has a relatively open access channel that is flanked by disordered loops that may explain the relatively high turnover number (280 s(-1) at pH 7.0) toward CDNB. The disordered loops form an extensive contiguous patch on one face of the dimeric enzyme, a fact that suggests that the protein surface may interact with a membrane or other protein partner. PMID: 14717589 [PubMed - in process] 4: Carcinogenesis. 2004 Mar;25(3):359-67. Epub 2003 Nov 21. Selective expression of glutathione S-transferase genes in the murine gastrointestinal tract in response to dietary organosulfur compounds. Andorfer JH, Tchaikovskaya T, Listowsky I. Department of Biochemistry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, NY 10461, USA. A short-term feeding regimen was designed to analyze the effects of compounds such as diallyl disulfide (DADS), diallylthiosulfinate (allicin) from garlic and butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) on glutathione S-transferase (GST) expression in the gastrointestinal tract and liver of male mice. After animals were force-fed these compounds, tissue GSTs were purified and individual subunits resolved by HPLC and identified on the basis of mass spectrometry (ESI MS) and immunoreactivity data. The effects of DADS and allicin on GST expression were especially prominent in stomach and small intestine, where there were major coordinate changes in GST subunit profiles. In particular, the transcripts of the mGSTM1 and mGSTM4 genes, which share large segments of common 5'-flanking sequences, and their corresponding subunits were selectively induced. Levels of alpha class subunits also increased, whereas mGSTM3 and mGSTP1 were not affected. The inducible mGSTA5 and non-responsive mGSTM3 subunits had not been identified previously. Liver and colon GSTs were also affected to a lesser extent, but this short-term feeding regimen had no effect on GST subunit patterns from other organs, including heart, brain and testis. Real-time PCR (TaqMan) methods were used for quantitative estimations of relative amounts of the mRNAs encoding the GSTs. Effects on the transcripts generally paralleled changes at the protein level, for the most part, however, the greatest relative increases were observed for those mRNAs that were expressed at low abundance constituitively. Mechanisms by which the organosulfur compounds operate to affect GST transcription could involve reversible modification of certain protein sulfhydryl groups, shifts in reduced glutathione/oxidized glutathione ratios and resultant changes in cellular redox status. PMID: 14633659 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] 5: Nutr Cancer. 2001;40(2):205-10. Relative activities of organosulfur compounds derived from onions and garlic in increasing tissue activities of quinone reductase and glutathione transferase in rat tissues. Munday R, Munday CM. Ruakura Agricultural Research Centre, Hamilton, New Zealand. rex.munday@... There is evidence that onions and garlic protect against cancer in humans. It has been suggested that this effect is due to the organosulfur compounds in these vegetables and that these substances act through induction of phase II detoxification enzymes. In the present studies, we have compared the ability of diallyl sulfide, dially disulfide, and diallyl trisulfide, compounds that are derived from garlic, to increase the activity of the phase II enzymes quinone reductase and glutathione transferase in a variety of rat tissues. We have also examined the onion-derived substances, dipropyl sulfide, dipropyl disulfide, dipropenyl sulfide, and dipropenyl disulfide, under identical conditions. Diallyl trisulfide and diallyl disulfide were potent inducers of the phase II enzymes. Dipropenyl disulfide was much less active, while little effect on enzyme activity was seen in animals dosed with dipropyl disulfide. Diallyl sulfide and dipropyl sulfide were weak inducers of quinone reductase and glutathione transferase, but dipropenyl sulfide was very active, with an effect similar to that of diallyl disulfide. It is possible that diallyl disulfide and diallyl trisulfide are important in the anticancer action of garlic, while dipropenyl sulfide could be involved in the beneficial action of onions. PMID: 11962257 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] 6: Nutr Neurosci. 2001;4(3):213-22. Sulfur amino acid deficiency depresses brain glutathione concentration. Paterson PG, Lyon AW, Kamencic H, Andersen LB, Juurlink BH. College of Pharmacy and Nutrition, Cameco Multiple Sclerosis and Neuroscience Research Center, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada. phyllis.paterson@... Dietary sulfur amino acid content is a major determinant of glutathione concentration in some tissues. We examined whether brain glutathione (GSH), a key component of antioxidant defense important for minimizing ischemic injury, was also responsive to short-term sulfur amino acid deficiency. Female Long- adult rats were fed a sulfur-deficient L-amino acid defined diet for five days; the control diet was supplemented with L-cystine and L-methionine (n = 6). Sulfur amino acid deficiency was confirmed by a reduction in liver cysteine and GSH concentrations, marked decreases in food intake, and weight loss. GSH concentration analyzed by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography was significantly depressed in the neocortex and thalamus of deficient rats. Brain cysteine was not decreased in a parallel manner. Classical glutathione peroxidase activity was increased in the liver and brain of sulfur amino acid deficient rats. This suggests an upregulation of antioxidant defense but these findings may be complicated by alterations in tissue composition. The depletion of brain GSH by a reduced supply of dietary precursors may be important during brain ischemia when the rate of GSH utilization and the need for synthesis are increased. PMID: 11842890 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] 7: Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2002 Jan;5(1):85-92. Comment in: Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2002 Jan;5(1):43-5. Redox control of the transsulfuration and glutathione biosynthesis pathways. Deplancke B, Gaskins HR. Division of Nutritional Sciences, Department of Animal Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1207 W. Drive, Urbana, IL 61801, USA. Intracellular reduction-oxidation status is increasingly recognized as a primary regulator of cellular growth and development. The relative reduction-oxidation state of the cell depends primarily on the precise balance between concentrations of reactive oxygen species and the cysteine-dependent antioxidant thiol buffers glutathione and thioredoxin, which by preferentially reacting with reactive oxygen species, protect other intracellular molecules from oxidative damage. The transsulfuration pathway constitutes the major route of cysteine biosynthesis, and may thus be central in controlling the intracellular reduction-oxidation state and the balance between self-renewal and differentiation programs. This review discusses new findings on reciprocal reduction-oxidation modulation of enzymes involved in the transsulfuration and glutathione biosynthesis pathways, as well as studies elucidating the impact of sulfur amino acid availability on these pathways. Publication Types: Review Review, Tutorial PMID: 11790955 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 2, 2004 Report Share Posted May 2, 2004 , How much epsom salts did you use in that first bath? The average man or woman on the street will not have a bad reaction to epsom salts, so it means something unusual is happening. I'm going to repost below something I wrote two years ago to another list, and it may help explain your son's reaction. =========================== At 12:42 PM 6/19/2002 +0000, you wrote: >I tried Epsom salts in the bath based on some posts I saw on this >board. Both of my kids were extremely emotional afterwards, >coincidence?? I don't know enough about this yet to understand what >it is supposed to do, or what the side effects are. I think the trick here, which is important to know about, is that you need to start slowly when introducing a supplement of something for which you have been deficient a long time, and then slowly work up to more. This is because, unlike drugs, where the quantity of a dose is set by the doctor trying to obtain a blood level of something FOREIGN to the body, introducing a supplement of something the body uses every day works in a whole different way, and this can be generalized to lots of things. I'll explain why. Most chemical reactions happen inside cells after substances have crossed over the cell's outer membrane. For things cells use everyday, they have specific transporters and receptors that are expressed on the cell surface in the quantity that is appropriate to assure an appropriate supply to that cell type. Not all cells like the same quantity. When everything works right, the inside of the cell gets the appropriate quantity of what it needs of that substance. The cell wants not too much and not too little and it knows how to adjust the availability of that substance to the inside of the cell when the supply outside the cell changes. If the supply of something the body uses up every day has been low for awhile, the cell will upregulate the transporter or receptor that is specific for that substance. Upregulation means it will put more of these working molecules on the cell surface in order to increase the odds that the substance will find its receptor or transporter. When the supply has been high for a long time, the cell will also cut back the quantity of the receptor or transporter on the cell surface. Cells are very fluid like that: changing and adjusting constantly: not like a machine at all! Your car doesn't increase the gas caps when its fuel supply is low, but it doesn't have to get its gas from the passing parade by chance and kinetics... So, if you have been deficient in sulfate for a long time, your cells would have upregulated the transporters to make much of little. All over the body, receptors that need sulfated ligands might have been upregulated as well, trying to increase their signal or supply. If you suddenly increase the quantity of sulfate that approaches the cell by several fold, you can get too intense a signal, and that can be overwhelming. That is why you should start slowly. This gives your body's cells a chance to readjust to the new level they will be seeing. We're not trying to overdo that level, but just to return it to something normal. Remember that cells are accustomed to biological rhythms that change the quantities of nutrients that cells see. This includes feeding schedules and sleep. Cells don't make these adjustments on whim or very quickly, for they know there will be long periods of time when the supply gets lower just because it has been a long time since you ate something. I would guess, for that reason, that cells tend to adjust to conditions that may continue for at least a day or two. The way this biology works gives me the suspicion that the children who get the most hyper after their first epsom salts bath or baths may be the children who have been the most deficient of this substance, and have receptors and transporters dialed WAY up. If you are deficient in supply, even when you have receptors or transporters expressed at extremely high quantity, you still might be low in quantity for the function you need. The increase of receptors or transporters will help, but it isn't much of a solution long term. If you get exposed to something that requires a lot of sulfate for your body to detoxify (like phenols in fumes or foods or drugs), the level of sulfate available for NORMAL functions will be hurting temporarily as your body tries to recover from this demand. The loss of the function of other molecules that use sulfate for normal function is likely what is producing symptoms: not your body feeling toxic as if it had just been " burned " by the substance your body was trying to detoxify. That sort of injury might take longer and it would probably be more subtle, anyway. If you are having neurological reactions, you are probably seeing an adjustment in the neurological chemistry which is feeling shorted and may be overwhelmed with sudden change. Of course, you really need an appropriate supply of sulfate, but the story of HOW the supply got low in the first place can be very different from child to child, and involve organs like the kidneys, the liver and the GI tract and systems like the immune system. Anyway, as an example of this sort of mechanism with an entirely different substance, I'll tell you a little about the secretin story. This sort of receptor-quantity issue was suspected to be happening in the children with autism who were given IV secretin. In response to the same dose that had a predictable response in normal people, those with autism instead put out huge quantities of pancreatic fluid. Their response was intense on the very same dose that other patients were getting without experiencing this overexuberant response. Why? The sudden increase in secretin was more of a surprise for the bodies of autistic children than it was for the other children with GI problems being tested. The pancreas was OVER responsive to secretin probably because this was the first good supply of secretin that it had gotten in a long time. Scientists suspected that the amount of secretin these children had been producing on their own had been low for a long time. I hope all this makes sense. Your body makes secretin, but it also makes sulfate from the amino acids cysteine and methionine. There may be a reason this isn't happening appropriately. I've heard of parents starting with as little as a teaspoon in the bathwater and working up. You can also apply the solution topically, and can control the quantity by how much surface of the skin you cover. The half-life of sulfate in the blood is 4-9 hours. At any rate, , and any other listmates who saw something similar happen, please do not interpret this to mean the epsom salts were the wrong thing...it may mean exactly the opposite! Normal people do not have any response to epsom salts baths except maybe to feel relaxed later! They don't get hyper or emotional... If you have already tried reducing the quantity of epsom salts drastically and slowly increasing the quantity, and it doesn't work to reduce this hyper or emotional response, I'd be glad to talk to you offlist about what else it might mean. Anyway, I hope this helps. You've just got to think like a cell thinks! At 03:15 AM 5/2/2004 +0000, you wrote: > > , your email got me thinking - does GSH contain sulfur? I'm > > really naive about all of this, but my son has a similar reaction >to > > epsom salt baths. There's no pain, but he becomes a live wire and >is > > unable to sleep after an epsom salt bath > >HUM... My 2 year old son Slater also went nuts after our one and >only epson salt bath.. he was hyper in the tub and for hours >afterwards-much worse than how he was when I put him in the bath. I >guess I need to learn more about this too. He is showing more signs >of aggression but not sure if it is body awareness/sensory issues, >being a typical 2 year old or something else. Another puzzle to >figure out..I read Dr. McCandless' response to someone about >aggressiveness and Glutathione yesterday and wondered about our >situation. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 2, 2004 Report Share Posted May 2, 2004 , Would the cell explanation apply to any medicine? Our daughter started Strattera in March. We were told to start with 25mg. for three days then increase to 40mg. She broke out in cold sweats with cold, clammy hands on the 40mg. I decreased it to 20mg. and she still had the same symptoms. I decreased it to 10mg. and the symptoms stopped. Three doctors told me that Strattera would not cause these symptoms. Our daughter's pediatrician suggested that I keep her on 40mg and check her blood for hypoglycemia for a week and give her the results. I started that on Friday. Her blood levels seem within normal range, but she still has cold sweats. Last night I cut back to 10mg. and she didn't have any symptoms today. So, I didn't check her blood levels. She is so much more focused on the Strattera, but I'm scared of it at this point. Shari Re: Re: GSH causing pain in 2yo? - candidate for SJS or TENS? > , > > How much epsom salts did you use in that first bath? The average man or > woman on the street will not have a bad reaction to epsom salts, so it > means something unusual is happening. I'm going to repost below something > I wrote two years ago to another list, and it may help explain your son's > reaction. > > > > =========================== > At 12:42 PM 6/19/2002 +0000, you wrote: > >I tried Epsom salts in the bath based on some posts I saw on this > >board. Both of my kids were extremely emotional afterwards, > >coincidence?? I don't know enough about this yet to understand what > >it is supposed to do, or what the side effects are. > > I think the trick here, which is important to know about, is that you need > to start slowly when introducing a supplement of something for which you > have been deficient a long time, and then slowly work up to more. This is > because, unlike drugs, where the quantity of a dose is set by the doctor > trying to obtain a blood level of something FOREIGN to the body, > introducing a supplement of something the body uses every day works in a > whole different way, and this can be generalized to lots of things. I'll > explain why. > > Most chemical reactions happen inside cells after substances have crossed > over the cell's outer membrane. For things cells use everyday, they have > specific transporters and receptors that are expressed on the cell surface > in the quantity that is appropriate to assure an appropriate supply to that > cell type. Not all cells like the same quantity. When everything works > right, the inside of the cell gets the appropriate quantity of what it > needs of that substance. The cell wants not too much and not too little and > it knows how to adjust the availability of that substance to the inside of > the cell when the supply outside the cell changes. > > If the supply of something the body uses up every day has been low for > awhile, the cell will upregulate the transporter or receptor that is > specific for that substance. Upregulation means it will put more of these > working molecules on the cell surface in order to increase the odds that > the substance will find its receptor or transporter. > > When the supply has been high for a long time, the cell will also cut back > the quantity of the receptor or transporter on the cell surface. Cells are > very fluid like that: changing and adjusting constantly: not like a machine > at all! Your car doesn't increase the gas caps when its fuel supply is > low, but it doesn't have to get its gas from the passing parade by chance > and kinetics... > > So, if you have been deficient in sulfate for a long time, your cells would > have upregulated the transporters to make much of little. All over the > body, receptors that need sulfated ligands might have been upregulated as > well, trying to increase their signal or supply. > > If you suddenly increase the quantity of sulfate that approaches the cell > by several fold, you can get too intense a signal, and that can be > overwhelming. That is why you should start slowly. This gives your body's > cells a chance to readjust to the new level they will be seeing. We're not > trying to overdo that level, but just to return it to something normal. > > Remember that cells are accustomed to biological rhythms that change the > quantities of nutrients that cells see. This includes feeding schedules > and sleep. Cells don't make these adjustments on whim or very quickly, for > they know there will be long periods of time when the supply gets lower > just because it has been a long time since you ate something. I would > guess, for that reason, that cells tend to adjust to conditions that may > continue for at least a day or two. > > The way this biology works gives me the suspicion that the children who get > the most hyper after their first epsom salts bath or baths may be the > children who have been the most deficient of this substance, and have > receptors and transporters dialed WAY up. > > If you are deficient in supply, even when you have receptors or > transporters expressed at extremely high quantity, you still might be low > in quantity for the function you need. The increase of receptors or > transporters will help, but it isn't much of a solution long term. > > If you get exposed to something that requires a lot of sulfate for your > body to detoxify (like phenols in fumes or foods or drugs), the level of > sulfate available for NORMAL functions will be hurting temporarily as your > body tries to recover from this demand. The loss of the function of other > molecules that use sulfate for normal function is likely what is producing > symptoms: not your body feeling toxic as if it had just been " burned " by > the substance your body was trying to detoxify. That sort of injury might > take longer and it would probably be more subtle, anyway. If you are > having neurological reactions, you are probably seeing an adjustment in the > neurological chemistry which is feeling shorted and may be overwhelmed with > sudden change. > > Of course, you really need an appropriate supply of sulfate, but the story > of HOW the supply got low in the first place can be very different from > child to child, and involve organs like the kidneys, the liver and the GI > tract and systems like the immune system. > > Anyway, as an example of this sort of mechanism with an entirely different > substance, I'll tell you a little about the secretin story. This sort of > receptor-quantity issue was suspected to be happening in the children with > autism who were given IV secretin. In response to the same dose that had a > predictable response in normal people, those with autism instead put out > huge quantities of pancreatic fluid. Their response was intense on the > very same dose that other patients were getting without experiencing this > overexuberant response. > > Why? The sudden increase in secretin was more of a surprise for the bodies > of autistic children than it was for the other children with GI problems > being tested. The pancreas was OVER responsive to secretin probably > because this was the first good supply of secretin that it had gotten in a > long time. Scientists suspected that the amount of secretin these children > had been producing on their own had been low for a long time. > > I hope all this makes sense. Your body makes secretin, but it also makes > sulfate from the amino acids cysteine and methionine. There may be a > reason this isn't happening appropriately. > > I've heard of parents starting with as little as a teaspoon in the > bathwater and working up. You can also apply the solution topically, and > can control the quantity by how much surface of the skin you cover. The > half-life of sulfate in the blood is 4-9 hours. > > At any rate, , and any other listmates who saw something similar > happen, please do not interpret this to mean the epsom salts were the wrong > thing...it may mean exactly the opposite! Normal people do not have any > response to epsom salts baths except maybe to feel relaxed later! They > don't get hyper or emotional... > > If you have already tried reducing the quantity of epsom salts drastically > and slowly increasing the quantity, and it doesn't work to reduce this > hyper or emotional response, I'd be glad to talk to you offlist about what > else it might mean. > > Anyway, I hope this helps. You've just got to think like a cell thinks! > > > > At 03:15 AM 5/2/2004 +0000, you wrote: > > > , your email got me thinking - does GSH contain sulfur? I'm > > > really naive about all of this, but my son has a similar reaction > >to > > > epsom salt baths. There's no pain, but he becomes a live wire and > >is > > > unable to sleep after an epsom salt bath > > > >HUM... My 2 year old son Slater also went nuts after our one and > >only epson salt bath.. he was hyper in the tub and for hours > >afterwards-much worse than how he was when I put him in the bath. I > >guess I need to learn more about this too. He is showing more signs > >of aggression but not sure if it is body awareness/sensory issues, > >being a typical 2 year old or something else. Another puzzle to > >figure out..I read Dr. McCandless' response to someone about > >aggressiveness and Glutathione yesterday and wondered about our > >situation. > > > > > > > Many frequently asked questions and answers can be found at <http://www.autism-rxguidebook.com/forums> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2004 Report Share Posted May 3, 2004 Shari, We might expect that all drugs imitate something normal to the body a little bit, for if they didn't, they would pass through our bodies and not change things. What I wrote would apply primarily to something normal to the body, but to whatever extent a drug like Strattera acts like something normal, it might effect the regulation of its closest lookalikes. Certainly, by watching the nature of the adverse responses, we may learn more about the drug's mechanism. I tried to find someone, via the web last night, who might have experienced the same thing but I was not successful. You might see if there is a Straterra discussion group somewhere and you might find someone else who also experienced the cold sweats. It always amazes me when someone goes to the doctor with a clear story that I had reaction A to drug B, and the doctor says, " This drug will not cause that reaction. " That's happened to me before, but I have also been the one in 40,000 who had a rare reaction to taking an antibiotic. Exposure to that drug gave me a blood disease that could have been fatal, and eventually, there were enough of us that this happened to that it persuaded the powers to be to severely curb the use of that drug. What is the terrific shame is that rather than figuring out what was special about us who had that reaction, they simply curbed the drug's use. What a waste! Anyway, you can tell that I think it is much more useful to think of adverse reactions as clues to important differences in our biochemical makeup. Shari, if you do find someone else who had cold sweats post Strattera, I would love it if you both would consider joining sulfurstories and there we could do a lot of comparing notes to try to figure out what the reason was for this unusual response. This " cold sweat " reaction could be the clue that will help you find a more (for her) direct approach for addressing her issues. In the meantime, I wouldn't mind at all taking a look at her labwork to see if there are any other clues, so please feel free to write me offlist! Also, keep our list here posted, please, if you find anyone else who had the same reaction. Best wishes, At 10:28 PM 5/2/2004 -0500, you wrote: >, >Would the cell explanation apply to any medicine? Our daughter started >Strattera in March. We were told to start with 25mg. for three days then >increase to 40mg. She broke out in cold sweats with cold, clammy hands on >the 40mg. I decreased it to 20mg. and she still had the same symptoms. I >decreased it to 10mg. and the symptoms stopped. Three doctors told me that >Strattera would not cause these symptoms. Our daughter's pediatrician >suggested that I keep her on 40mg and check her blood for hypoglycemia for a >week and give her the results. I started that on Friday. Her blood levels >seem within normal range, but she still has cold sweats. Last night I cut >back to 10mg. and she didn't have any symptoms today. So, I didn't check her >blood levels. She is so much more focused on the Strattera, but I'm scared >of it at this point. >Shari Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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