 by David Staup » Sun Aug 12, 2012 11:37 am
by David Staup » Sun Aug 12, 2012 11:37 am 
			
			Biologist 
Take a look at this:
David,
I wanted to share a recent experience with you that is along the lines 
of the Benadryl.
Several years ago I had tried taking a little DHEA to see if it would 
help with low energy.  I had a blood test and was within normal range, 
but wanted to see what would happen.  I believe I was taking about 15-20 
mg.  It made me extremely jumpy and angry, just like you'd see with high 
estrogen or testosterone levels, so I stopped right away.
In 2003 when I contracted neuroinvasive West Nile Virus I developed 
extensive damage to nerve roots in my spine.. At first the nerve damage 
affected my entire torso, but over several years it seemed to heal 
somewhat it localized more and appears to be a lesion in my thoracic 
spine with total nerve loss at the T-10 region.  This was so specific 
that it only affected one very small section of my intestines and caused 
gastroparesis.  I could not sleep lying down unless I had not eaten 
since afternoon. If there was any food in my upper GI tract I would wake 
up with excrutiating pain and vomiting. The main treatment is an 
implanted vagus nerve stimulator which I declined.  EMGs showed such 
severe axonal damage it didn't even pick up any electrical impulse in 
that area.
This past year I started having some menopausal symptoms like hot 
flashes and decided to revisit the DHEA since I didn't want to use 
hormone replacement therapy.  I took about 5 mg a day and it did relieve 
the symptoms.  I realized how much it had helped when I ran out for a 
couple of weeks.  So last week I started taking it again and decided to 
double the dose.  I didn't realize until a few days later that I was 
using the higher potency capsules, 50 mg instead of 25, so I was getting 
about 10 mg per day. I got up early one morning to go for a walk and was 
greatly surprised to find I could walk up a long hill without getting 
winded.  I walked 1 1/2 miles and hardly felt it.  But what was most 
surprising was that my back and abdominal pain from the nerve damage had 
improved quite dramatically. I could even lie down for a short time and 
not get the nausea and bloating.
First I looked to see if DHEA could replenish the myelin sheath which is 
what was damaged in my spine.  I found many references:
*http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18501592
*http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pbio.1001051
Then I looked to see if DHEA could possibly improve Pulmonary Arterial 
Hypertension which I had also developed from viral infection. That would 
explain my higher level of exercise tolerance.  I found that they were 
conducting clinical trials because it had been so effective.
*http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20206649
It's interesting that the nerve damage is related to over-expression of 
apoptosis, but the pulmonary hypertension from under-expression in the 
vessels - the proliferation is what causes PH.  So the DHEA seemed to 
have a modulating effect on both my conditions.
Again, I think when you go with a lower dose you let the body determine 
how it's going to use the compound.  When I tried taking DHEA many years 
ago the dose was just too high for me since I had high levels of 
estrogen and it was probably being shunted that direction.  Now that I 
have low estrogen levels my body seems to be using it in a more diffused 
way.  This is probably true for men and testosterone related to DHEA 
intake.  If you do a search on PubMed for DHEA and apoptosis there are a 
lot of interesting studies. Since we have so much Parkinson's in my 
family which is probably mito-related and DHEA has been used as a 
treatment, it made me wonder if it might be exerting the same protective 
effect as the Benadryl.
I doubt that I could ever find a neurologist who would follow this line 
of reasoning.  I have tried to see a doctor at the University of 
Colorado's MDA clinic, but because I refused to see his partner who is a 
total jerk, I'm now on their black list and they won't give me an 
appointment.  I have been very active in promoting the MDA for several 
decades since they treat the muscle disease that runs in my family, but 
to punish someone because we want a choice in doctors is ridiculous.
Anyway, thought that might make some interesting reading for you. It was 
discussed a little on the forum and I seem to recall you mentioned 
pregnenolone.  I'm using the Swanson Vitamins DHEA 50 mg capsule and 
taking small doses.
There are conflicting lines of evidence that dhea in small doses increases glutathione or decreases it.......?????
David