Jane Kelley wrote it for John Prather to answer..
How about this one....
JK> @TID: IMAIL-386 1.75+ PK29
JK> @MSGID: 1:138/255@FIDONET 2ec84d40
JK> @PID: JCQWK 2.02 Rev A
JK> The information on turkey finally rang a bell I see.........
JP>WHOA!!!!. What about turkey and tryptophan. Are you saying that
JP>your son has an alergy like reaction to turkey. My son seems to go
JP>up and down and we have always thought that it might be diet but we
JP>have never been able to tag anything specifically. We know that at
JP>certain times his ears turn bright red (this is not necessarily
JP>accompanied by changes in his hyperactivity) and we are sure that he
JP>has an alergy to something. Really no asthmatic reactions though.
JK> Congratulations. You have finally caught up to those who were working
JK> with alcoholics some 50+ years ago. One Dr. Silkworth wrote two
JK> letters that are printed in every copy of the Big Book of Alcoholics
JK> Anonymous and in one of them he stated on page xxvi of the third
JK> edition:
JK> "We believe, and so suggested a few years ago, that the action of
JK> alcohol on these chronic alcoholics is a manifestation of an
JK> allergy; that the phenomenon of craving is limited to this class and
JK> never occurs in the average temperate drinker. These allergic types
JK> can never safely use alcohol in any form at all;
No, Jane. What is the relationship of turkey to tryptophan and why
does it affect alcoholics. I am and have long been aware of the
relationship of alcoholics and alergic or hypersensitive reactions
to the chemical produced in the bodies of alcoholics during the
metabolization of alcohol. These ideas were presented in hard
evidence in the middle 70's. This is pretty well known in the medical
community. That alcohol is, in itself, not addicting but by
products of the metabolization of alcohol in a certain part of the
population is.
My question was, what is the relationship of tryptophan, turkey and
alcoholism. Is the tryptophan used in the production of these
lipoproteins.
And once again, what does this have to do with ADHD. I checked in
with the NIH last week and they have not changed their position.
Alcoholism, genetic links to alcoholism, FAS, food and food alergies
are in no way related to ADHD. Agreed that there are alergies (and
perhaps the alcohol is one) that produce symptoms similar to ADHD.
This is not ADHD. True, people who suspect ADHD should infact
investigate these possibilities but this is not ADHD........ My
niece was found to have an unusual brain alergy to certain grasses.
The alergens she is sensitive to is contained in sugar. Sugar is
not the problem, the byproducts of extracting sugar from cane (a
grass) is the problem.
There is no hint of genetic alcoholism in my family. I am, as you
say, an average (or less) temperate drinker. Never had a problem
with any sort of alcohol addiction nor have my siblings, my parents
or my grandparents. My grandfather is probably the only exception
to this but I doubt that he was an alcoholic. Drank too much on
occasion but more out of self pity. He did not fit the modus
operandi or addictive behaviour of an alcoholic.
--- GEcho 1.01+
---------------
* Origin: The Banter Decanter (1:231/640.0)
|