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| Vitamin B5 Deficiency, Alcoholism
and Depression |
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Given the frequency and popularity of alcohol
consumption around the world and the fact that alcohol
depletes vitamin B5, deficiency of the vitamin may
be a lot more common than we thought. In this article,
Acne Specialist takes a look at the correlation
between alcohol consumption, vitamin B5 deficiency
and depression.
Symptoms of vitamin B5 deficiency are fatigue, chronic
stress, and depression. Vitamin B5 is needed for
hormone formation and the uptake of amino acids
and the brain chemical acetylcholine, which combine
to prevent certain types of depression.
An important function of vitamin B5 is that it aids
the body in alcohol detoxification. It is also needed
to counteract stress and to maintain a healthy nervous
system. A study showed that vitamin B5 speeds up
liver detoxification of acetaldehyde after alcohol
consumption. This is very important for those who
consume excessive alcohol because acetaldehyde appears
to be a major chemical in the toxic process that
accompanies long term alcohol use. Vitamin B5 is
required in increased amounts in liver disease and
in those who use alcohol excessively.
Alcoholism and Depression
Biochemical depression has certain symptoms that
distinguish it from the depression stemming from
negative life events. Heavy drinking is a major
contributor to biochemical depression. You are likely
to be biologically depressed if:
- You have been depressed for a long time
despite changes in your life
- Talk therapy has little or no effect; in
fact, psychological probing
- You don't react to good news
- You awaken very early in the morning and
can't get back to sleep
- You cannot trace the onset of your depression
to any event in your life
- Your moods may swing between depression
and elation over a period of months in a regular
rhythm (this suggests bipolar, or manic-depressive,
disorder)
- Heavy drinking makes your depression worse
Depression, like the other emotional problems, often
has biochemical roots that stem from the destructive
effect of alcohol on the chemistry of the brain.
Research has verified the relationship between biochemistry
and depression. Autopsies of people who have committed
suicide have revealed biochemical disruptions that
are unique to suicidal depression.
Vitamin and Mineral Deficiency
and Depression
The effect of nutritional deficiencies on brain
chemistry can cause depression, anger, listlessness,
and paranoia.
One of the most dramatic cases of vitamin and mineral
deficiencies involved a man who had been arrested
four times for drunken driving but continued to
drink daily. He was thirty, divorced, and living
alone. He rarely ate more than one meal a day, usually
fast food or junk food. He lived on coffee, cigarettes,
and beer. Paul confided that he was probably going
to lose his sales job because he could no longer
motivate himself. He blamed all of his troubles
on depression. There were so many aspects of his
lifestyle that suggested a real depletion of the
natural chemicals he needed to recover from alcoholism
and depression.
The man was diagnosed and given B-complex shots,
and he remarked that his doctor must have injected
him with an amphetamine! The effect of restoring
these life-giving substances was dramatic. He also
made many lifestyle changes that contributed to
his recovery, but one of the most important was
the replacement of certain key natural substances
that helped relieve his depression.
Vitamin B5 (and B-Complex
Vitamins)
Vitamin B5 and the B-complex vitamins are essential
to mental and emotional well-being. They cannot
be stored in our bodies, so we depend entirely on
our daily diet to supply them. B vitamins, particularly
vitamin B5 which are easily destroyed in cooking
and modern food processing, are destroyed by alcohol,
refined sugars, nicotine, and caffeine-the very
substances that most alcoholics consume almost to
the exclusion of everything else. Small wonder that
deficiencies develop. Here's a rundown of recent
findings about the relationship of B-complex vitamins
to depression:
- Vitamin B5 (pantothenic acid): Symptoms
of deficiency are fatigue, chronic stress, and
depression. Vitamin B5 is needed for hormone
formation and the uptake of amino acids and
the brain chemical acetylcholine, which combine
to prevent certain types of depression.
- Vitamin B (thiamine): Deficiencies trigger
depression and irritability and can cause neurological
and cardiac disorders among alcoholics.
- Vitamin B2 (riboflavin): In 1982 an article
published in the British Journal of Psychiatry
reported that every one of 172 successive patients
admitted to a British psychiatric hospital for
treatment of depression was deficient in B2.
- Vitamin B3 (niacin): Depletion causes anxiety,
depression, apprehension, and fatigue.
- Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine): Deficiency can
disrupt formation of neurotransmitters. Vitamin
B6 is a coenzyme needed for conversion of tryptophan
to serotonin and phenylalanine and tyrosine
to norepinephrine. I have discussed the relationships
of these neurotransmitters to depression earlier
in this chapter.
- Vitamin B12: Deficiency will cause depression.
- Folic acid: Deficiency is a common cause
of depression.
Vitamin C
Continuing vitamin C deficiency causes chronic depression,
fatigue, and vague ill health.
Minerals
Deficiencies in a number of minerals can also cause
depression.
- Zinc: Inadequacies result in apathy, lack
of appetite, and lethargy. When zinc is low,
copper in the body can increase to toxic levels,
resulting in paranoia and fearfulness.
- Magnesium: Symptoms of deficiency include
confusion, apathy, loss of appetite, weakness,
and insomnia.
- Calcium: Depletion affects the central nervous
system. Low levels of calcium cause nervousness,
apprehension, irritability, and numbness.
- Iron: Depression is often a symptom of chronic
iron deficiency. Other symptoms include general
weakness, listlessness, exhaustion, lack of
appetite, and headaches.
- Manganese: This metal is needed for proper
use of the B-complex vitamins and vitamin C.
Since it also plays a role in amino-acid formation,
a deficiency may contribute to depression stemming
from low levels of the neurotransmitters serotonin
and norepinephrine. Manganese also helps stabilize
blood sugar and prevent hypoglycemic mood swings.
- Potassium: Depletion is frequently associated
with depression, fearfulness, weakness, and
fatigue. A 1981 study found that depressed patients
were more likely than controls to have decreased
intracellular potassium. Decreased brain levels
of potassium have also been found on autopsies
of suicides. You can boost your potassium intake
by using one teaspoon of Morton's Lite-Salt
every day.
The Safety of Supplements
Vitamin C and the B-complex vitamins discussed above
are all water soluble. This means that they can't
accumulate in your body or be stored for future
use. Amounts above and beyond your current nutritional
needs are dumped into your urine. As a result, there
is no danger of overdose.
Unlike water soluble vitamins, minerals can be stored
in your tissues. Therefore, please do not exceed
the recommended therapeutic doses, since accumulation
of minerals in the body can be dangerous. SkinB5
contains vitamin B5 and zinc, so whilst treating
your acne, it can help prevent alcohol related depression
and support mental health.
Good sites for information on acne treatments:
https://www.acnefighters.com
http://www.skinb5.com |
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