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Notes on Mercury Dopamine Inositol Tyrosine

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Hi everyone, been busy with research tonight so I am sharing what I learned (and

combining it with what I already knew).

Here goes. Mercury binds insulin, and when you chelate mercury it releases

insulin. Insulin lowers dopamine and therefore you start wasting dopamine while

you are chelating.

Initially this will give you a high dopamine reaction - you are suspicious, on

guard, prone, and lacking empathy. You may have psychosis or unreasonable

fears. You likely will have some kind of " reward prediction error " - meaning

you expect something rewarding to happen (and perhaps are impulsive in gaining

it?)

So, at this point let's try to slow down the dopamine loss. I am thinking a

couple small doses of tyrosine might help.

Dopamine inhibits inositol phosphate production. Somehow this has something to

do with OCD and some inositol will help with this loss (I suggest same thing as

with tyrosine, small doses with indication of OCD coming on and stop when

resolved).

I think dopamine takes awhile to start getting depleted, but my son's seems to

be depleted so that is why I am researching this. Dopamine depletion is the

hallmark of Parkinson's disease. Shaking, tremors, difficulty walking and

coordination problems. Also constipation. Also signs of low dopamine are:

depression, loss of motor control, loss of satisfaction, addictions, cravings

and compulsions.

When the inositol doesn't work anymore for the OCD, I think it is the dopamine

that needs raising. That is where tyrosine comes in. My son's symptoms were,

specifically: waking in the morning acting like he was in physical pain and

agony if he couldn't play on the computer or video games. His body was craving

the stimulus to raise his dopamine. I am going to try giving a small amount of

tyrosine tonight and see if that helps him in the morning. If it is well

tolerated, I may give a more therapeutic dose and then maintain as needed for

similar symptoms.

I will let you know how it works out.

Liz

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