Thought this was very interesting with perhaps implications for everyone as
perhaps many combinations of chemicals plus stress could cause the same
thing.The stress involved was minimal.
BW
Sheila

http://www.ascribe.org/cgi-bin/spew4th.pl?ascribeid=20040226.123126&time=13%
2031%20PST&year=2004&public=1

Ascribe
Thu Feb 26 13:31:16 2004 Pacific Time

      Mix of Chemicals Plus Stress Damages Brain, Liver in Animals and
Likely in Humans
       DURHAM, N.C., Feb. 26 (AScribe Newswire) -- Stress is a well known
culprit in disease, but now researchers have shown that stress can intensify
the effects of relatively safe chemicals, making them very harmful to the
brain and liver in animals and likely in humans, as well.

       Even short-term exposure to specific chemicals -- just 28 days --
when combined with stress was enough to cause widespread cellular damage in
the brain and liver of rats, said Mohamed Abou Donia, Ph.D., a Duke
pharmacologist and senior author of the study.

       Results of the study were published in the Feb. 27, 2004, issue of
the Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health.

       Abou Donia's study was designed to reproduce the symptoms of Gulf War
Syndrome, a disorder marked by chronic fatigue, muscle and joint pain,
tremors, headaches, difficulties concentrating and learning, loss of memory,
irritability and reproductive problems. The Gulf War Syndrome symptoms have
been difficult to explain because veterans outwardly appear healthy and
normal, said Abou Donia. Likewise, the chemically exposed animals in Abou
Donia's studies looked and behaved normally.

       But a decade of neurologic research has revealed widespread damage to
the brain, nervous system, liver and testes of rats exposed to 60 days of
low-dose chemicals -- the insect repellant DEET, the insecticide permethrin,
and the anti-nerve gas agent pyridostigmine bromide. These are the same
drugs that the soldiers received during the 1990 - 1991 Persian Gulf War,
and Abou Donia's rats were exposed to the same levels -- in weight adjusted
doses -- as the soldiers were reportedly given.

       Now, Abou Donia has demonstrated that the combination of stress and
short-term exposure to chemicals (28 days) can promote cellular death in
specific brain regions and injury to the liver. Moreover, the chemical trio
combined with stress caused damage to portions of the brain where its
protective blood-brain barrier was still intact.

       The latter finding suggests that the chemicals permeated the
protective barrier in one region, then leaked into other regions of the
brain where the barrier remained intact. The ability of chemicals to leak
from one area of the brain to another holds the potential for much greater
damage to occur to the entire brain.

       Brain regions that sustained significant damage in this study were
the cerebral cortex (motor and sensory function), the hippocampus (learning
and memory) and the cerebellum (gait and coordination of movements). Abou
Donia's earlier studies demonstrated severe damage to the cingulate cortex,
dentate gyrus, thalamus and hypothalamus.(The thalamus is the major relay
for visual and auditory information going to the cortex and is also
responsible for subjective feelings. The hypothalamus regulates metabolism,
sleep and sexual activity, as well as control of emotions.)

       Abou Donia's team found a significant number of dead or dying brain
cells in all of these brain regions, as well as major alterations to brain
chemicals that are necessary for learning and memory, muscle strength and
body movement. Stress alone caused little or no brain injury in the rats,
nor did the three chemicals given together in low doses for 28 days.

       "But when we put the animals under moderate stress by simply
restricting their movement in a plastic holder for five minutes at a time
every day, the animals experienced enough stress that it intensified the
effects of the chemicals dramatically," said Abou Donia.

       Soldiers in the Gulf War were likely under stress 24 hours a day for
weeks or months at a time, a scenario which could explain the origins of
their diverse physical and cognitive complaints, said Abou Donia.

       "The brain deficits we found in rats reside in specific areas of the
brain that we can't measure in living humans," said Abou Donia. "This is why
the deficits are so difficult to assess clinically and why animal studies
are so critical to understanding the cellular damage."

       In addition to brain injuries, the Duke study found unexpected damage
to the liver, including swollen cells, congested blood vessels and abnormal
fatty deposits that diminish the liver cells' function. Liver cells also
showed reduced activity of an important enzyme -- BuCHE -- that helps rid
the body of some toxic substances. Neither stress by itself nor chemicals
alone had any impact on BuCHE levels, but the combination did.

       Such damage to the liver can reduce its ability to rid the body of
toxic substances -- its primary function as a vital organ. And, the less
effectively the liver filters out toxic substances, the more the chemicals
can concentrate in the brain and nervous system, he added.

       Finally, the study showed that stress plus chemicals increased the
amount of destructive molecules in the brain called reactive oxygen
species -- also known as oxygen free radicals. Reactive oxygen species are
produced by the body as it metabolizes various substances in the presence of
oxygen.

       Reactive oxygen species attack DNA, RNA and proteins, causing
cellular and membrane damage. Normally, the body removes these chemicals
from the body and the brain. But excessive production of reactive oxygen
species can overwhelm the body's ability to dispose of them.

       "In our study, there was an increase in reactive oxygen species. We
think that either the three chemicals and stress directly produce these free
radicals, or the chemicals impede the body's ability to get rid of them,"
said Abou Donia.

---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.593 / Virus Database: 376 - Release Date: 20/02/04


--
The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.

Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org

To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
Silver List archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html

Address Off-Topic messages to: silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com
OT Archive: http://escribe.com/health/silverofftopiclist/index.html

List maintainer: Mike Devour <mdev...@eskimo.com>