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Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid depletion of plasma tryptophan: a review of studies and experimental methodology.

TLDR
A series of studies in depressed patients and their first-degree relatives have shown the importance of an intact 5-HT system in the action of antidepressants and offer new insights into the biology of affective disorder.
Abstract
Evidence that the neurotransmitter serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) plays a role in the pathophysiology of mood disorders has been accumulating over the past three decades. Recent studies on this neurotransmitter have extended across the spectrum of psychiatric disorder, suggesting a role for 5-HT in psychosis, aggression, eating disorders and addiction. However, much of the evidence has come from post-mortem examination of the brain or measures of peripheral rather than central 5-HT function. The technique of tryptophan depletion allows investigation of brain 5-HT function in living subjects by examining the behavioural responses to this pharmacological challenge. This review considers the current status of tryptophan depletion as an experimental technique and discusses the implications of findings both in affective disorders and in a range of other psychiatric syndromes. MEDLINE and PSYCHLIT searches were completed for the years 1966 to November 1996 using the key words 'serotonin', '5-hydroxytryptamine', 'tryptophan' and 'depletion'. In addition relevant journals were hand-searched for the period from 1980 to December 1996. Forty-four double-blind studies in humans and three clinical case reports were identified; these cover a range of psychiatric disorders including mood disorders and psychoses, anxiety and eating disorders and specific behaviours such as appetite, aggression and craving. The studies reviewed utilized a variety of differing methodologies reducing the extent to which results can be generalized. A series of studies in depressed patients (before and after treatment with antidepressants) and their first-degree relatives have shown the importance of an intact 5-HT system in the action of antidepressants and offer new insights into the biology of affective disorder. The mood change induced by tryptophan depletion may predict those patients likely to respond to 5-HT-specific drugs. Rapid tryptophan depletion has also been reported to exacerbate both panic and aggression in vulnerable individuals. Effects in other disorders are conflicting and further research is needed to clarify these findings.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mood is indirectly related to serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine levels in humans: a meta-analysis of monoamine depletion studies.

TL;DR: Although depletion studies usefully investigate the etiological link of 5-HT and NE with MDD, they fail to demonstrate a causal relation, and presumably clarify a vulnerability trait to become depressed.
Journal ArticleDOI

L-Tryptophan: Basic Metabolic Functions, Behavioral Research and Therapeutic Indications:

TL;DR: As the sole precursor of serotonin, experimental research has shown that L-tryptophan's role in brain serotonin synthesis is an important factor involved in mood, behavior, and cognition, and clinical trials have provided some initial evidence of L-methine's efficacy for treatment of psychiatric disorders, particularly when used in combination with other therapeutic agents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vitamin D and the omega-3 fatty acids control serotonin synthesis and action, part 2: relevance for ADHD, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and impulsive behavior

TL;DR: A model whereby insufficient levels of vitamin D, EPA, or DHA, in combination with genetic factors and at key periods during development, would lead to dysfunctional serotonin activation and function is proposed and suggests that optimizing vitamin D and marine omega‐3 fatty acid intake may help prevent and modulate the severity of brain dysfunction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tryptophan depletion and its implications for psychiatry.

TL;DR: The findings that tryptophan depletion produces a relapse of symptoms in patients with depression and panic disorder who have responded to treatment with antidepressants suggests that enhanced 5-HT function is important in maintaining response in these conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monoamine depletion in psychiatric and healthy populations: review

TL;DR: The evidence suggests that all three interventions in humans for the period 1966 until December 2002 are specific, in terms of their short-term effects on one or two neurotransmitter systems, rather than on brain protein metabolism in general.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Serotonin Function and the Mechanism of Antidepressant Action: Reversal of Antidepressant-Induced Remission by Rapid Depletion of Plasma Tryptophan

TL;DR: The behavioral effects of rapid tryptophan depletion in patients in antidepressant-induced remission and the therapeutic effects of some antidepressant drugs may be dependent on serotonin availability are investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tryptophan depletion causes a rapid lowering of mood in normal males

TL;DR: Although the mood-lowering effect was not as great as that seen in depressed patients, the results suggest that low brain 5HT might be one factor precipitating depression in some patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stimulation of insulin secretion by amino acids.

TL;DR: In healthy subjects the effects upon plasma levels of insulin of the administration of single amino acids and combinations of amino acids with and without leucine were assessed.
Journal Article

Precursor control of neurotransmitter synthesis.

TL;DR: This relationship allows precursor administration to produce selective physiologic effects by enhancing neurotransmitter release from some but not all of the neurons potentially capable of utilizing the precursor for this purpose, and allows the investigator to predict when administering the precursor might be useful for amplifying a physiologic process, or for treating a pathologic state.
Journal ArticleDOI

A biochemical and pharmacological suggestion about certain mental disorders.

TL;DR: This discussion is going to revolve about serotonsin,5 or enteramine, if Erspamer's terminology is followed, and the occurrence and importance of serotonin, a second general idea is prerequisite to this discussion.
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