One Unifying Framework for Explaining and Treating Mental Illness
Christopher Palmer
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School; Founder and Director of the Metabolic and Mental Health Program and Director of Postgraduate and Continuing Education, McLean Hospital; Author of Brain Energy
Introducing Brain Energy: A Revolutionary Breakthrough in Understanding Mental Health and Improving Treatment for Anxiety, Depression, OCD, PTSD, and More
Excerpt from the Introduction
For more than twenty-five years as a psychiatrist and neuroscience researcher, I have been asked the question “What causes mental illness?” countless times by patients and their family members.?
When I first began my career, I would give long answers that made me sound educated and competent. I’d talk about neurotransmitters, hormones, genetics, and stress. I would describe the treatments we would be using and offer hope that they would make things better.?
After a few years of this, however, I began to feel like a fraud.?
You see, people often weren’t getting that much better. Treatments would sometimes work for a few months, or even a year or two, but more often than not, the symptoms would come back. At some point, I began telling people the simple truth: “No one knows what causes mental illness.” Although we understand many risk factors, no one knows how they all fit together. I still tried to offer hope by assuring people that we had many different treatments at our disposal and that we would try one after another until we found one that worked. Sadly, for many of my patients, we never did.?
That all changed for me in 2016 when I helped a patient lose weight. Tom was a thirty-three-year-old man with schizoaffective disorder, a cross between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. He had suffered from hallucinations, delusions, and mental anguish every day of his life over the last thirteen years. He was tormented by his illness. He had tried seventeen different medications, but none had worked. The medications sedated him, which reduced his anxiety and agitation, but they didn’t stop his hallucinations or delusions. What’s more, they’d caused him to gain over one hundred pounds. He had long been plagued by low self-esteem, and being so overweight only added to this. He had become a near hermit, and our weekly sessions were some of his only excursions into the outside world.?
This is partly why I agreed to help him lose weight: I was the doctor he saw most often, and he wasn’t in the market for a referral to a specialist he’d never met. More to the point, it was highly unusual for him to take action to improve his health in some way. Maybe losing weight could help him gain a sense of control over his life. After experimenting with several approaches without success, we decided to try the ketogenic diet—a diet low in carbohydrates, moderate in protein and high in fat.?
Within weeks, not only had Tom lost weight, but I began to notice remarkable and dramatic changes in his psychiatric symptoms. He was less depressed and less sedated. He began making more eye contact, and when he did, I saw a presence and spark there that I had never seen before. Most astonishingly, after two months, he told me that his longstanding hallucinations were receding and that he was rethinking his many paranoid conspiracy theories. He began to realize that they weren’t true and probably never had been. Tom went on to lose 150 pounds, move out of his father’s home, and complete a certificate program. He was even able to perform improv in front of a live audience, something that would have been impossible for him prior to the diet.?
I was flabbergasted. I had never seen anything like this in my entire career. While it’s possible that losing weight might reduce anxiety or depression in some people, this man had a psychotic disorder that had resisted more than a decade of treatment. Nothing in my knowledge or experience suggested that the ketogenic diet would treat his symptoms. There seemed to be no reason it should.?
I began digging into the medical literature and discovered that the ketogenic diet is a longstanding, evidence-based treatment for epilepsy. It can stop seizures even when medications fail to. I quickly realized an important connection—we use epilepsy treatments in psychiatry all the time. They include medications like Depakote, Neurontin, Lamictal, Topamax, Valium, Klonopin, and Xanax. If this diet also stops seizures, maybe that’s why it was helping Tom.?
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Based on this additional information, I began using the ketogenic diet as a treatment with other patients and when it continued to be successful, I soon found myself collaborating with researchers around the world to explore it further, speaking globally on this topic, and publishing papers in academic journals demonstrating its effectiveness.?
I set out on a journey to understand how and why this diet worked for my patients. Along with its use in epilepsy, the ketogenic diet is also used in treating obesity and diabetes and is even being pursued as a treatment for Alzheimer’s disease.?
At first, this was confusing and a bit overwhelming. Why would one treatment work for all of these disorders, even if only in some people? Ultimately, it was this question that opened the door to something much bigger than the inquiry I’d begun with. It forced me to uncover the connections between these different disorders and integrate this understanding with everything that I already knew as a neuroscientist and psychiatrist.?
When I finally put all the pieces together, I realized that I had stumbled upon something beyond my wildest dreams. I had developed a unifying theory for the cause of all mental illnesses.?
I call it the theory of brain energy.
About the Book
Drawing on decades of research, Harvard psychiatrist?Dr. Chris Palmer?outlines a revolutionary new understanding that for the first time unites our existing knowledge about mental illness within a single framework: Mental disorders are metabolic disorders of the brain.
Brain Energy?explains this new understanding of mental illness in detail, from symptoms and risk factors to what is happening in brain cells. Palmer also sheds light on the new treatment pathways this theory opens up—which apply to all mental disorders, including anxiety, depression, ADHD, alcoholism, eating disorders, bipolar disorder, autism, and even schizophrenia.?Brain Energy?pairs cutting-edge science with practical advice and strategies to help people reclaim their mental health.
To learn more go to?brainenergy.com.
BSc Student Wirtschaftsrecht | PhD Cantab | Anwaltsassistent | wissensdurstig | engagiert | vielseitig
2 年Got the audible. Great work.