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Excitotoxicity

Introduction

Excitotoxins such as glutamate (MSG monosodium glutamate) and aspartate (aspartame) are amino acids that can excite and damage neurons to the point of cell death.  Gluten, casein, and hydrolyzed yeast are a few of the many sources of glutamate in foods.  Glutamate is an excitatory neurotransmitter that is important for learning, memory, focus and attention.  The precursor to glutamate is an inhibitory (calming) neurotransmitter called Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid (GABA).  GABA is important for speech as well as preventing sensory overload and seizure activity.  Children with ASD have difficulty converting glutamate to GABA which requires B6.  Chronic viral infections can also prevent this conversion from taking place.  So the excess glutamate in the brain caused by environmental and dietary glutamate toxicity can trigger excitotoxicity.  Excitotoxicity has a direct effect on the regulation of the immune system which can cause depletion of the glutathione levels, the master antioxidant which excretes heavy metals from the body and prevents oxidative damage to the cells, and also apoptosis which is cell death in the brain.  When children with ASD experience an excitotoxicity reaction they become extremely hyperactive, engage in stemming behaviors, lack focus and concentration, may be self-injurious, are unable to sleep, and may have seizures.

Related Sites

Excitotoxicity: When Nourishing Foods Do Harm
Description:  Article about glutamates in food and their excitatory effects.

Unblind My Mind
Description:  Dr. Katherine Reid, a biochemist, developed the REID Program. The REID Program is a convenient acronym for “Reduced Excitatory and Inflammatory Diet,” a diet that eliminates excitatory chemicals and other substances known to over-stimulate the nervous system, immune response, and inflammation throughout the body.

Books

Autism Current Theories and Evidence by Martin Evers, Eric Hollander
Description:  Chapter 6 (Excitotoxicity in Autism) provides a very extensive explanation on the research and role of excitotoxicity in Autism Spectrum Disorders.

Excitotoxins: The Taste that Kills by Russell Blaylock, MD
Description:  This book describes how the current American diet is full of foods and beverages that contain MSG and Aspartame. Glutamates and aspartates can cause excitotoxicity in the brain by over stimulating neurons and triggering apoptosis (cell death). This can eventually lead to neurodegenerative diseases.

Tools

Autism Treatment – Glutamate, Excitotoxicity and Autism
Description:  In this video, Dr. Kurt Woeller explains autism, glutamate, and excitotoxicity and how some children with autism have sensitivity to foods with glutamate.

Ingredients to Avoid Besides Monosodium Glutamate
Description:  A thorough list of excitotoxins.

Parent Forums/Blogs

Some forums require you to sign in to Yahoo or Facebook to locate forum names.

Forum/Blog Name:  Become Free of MSG in Your Diet
Description:  This group is dedicated to the complete elimination of monosodium glutamate and other harmful excitotoxins from your diet.

Forum/Blog Name:  Glutamate Free
Description:  We are a community of people who, based on the work of Dr. Katie Reid, are trying to minimize/eliminate the free glutamate (MSG) in our kids' diets (as well as our own). Most of us have kids that are on the autism spectrum.

Consumer Corner

The AEX Directory
Description:  We do not provide medical advice on this site. Please consult your practitioner to discuss treatments for medical conditions. We do have a Directory feature that includes Practitioner Lists as well as Supplement Suppliers, Lab Test Companies, Compounding Pharmacies, and Prescription Drug Lookup. This feature can be accessed by clicking the link above or clicking The AEX Directory icon from our home page or any of the Navigation bar pages.

Community Library

The Role of Excitotoxicity in Autism Spectrum Disorders
Description:  Russell Blaylock MD gives an in depth understanding of the role of excitotoxicity and autism.

GABAergic/Glutamatergic Imbalance Relative to Excessive Neuroinflammation in Autism Spectrum Disorders by Afaf El-Ansary and Laila Al-Ayadhi
Description:  This study aimed to elucidate the relationship between glutamatergic/ GABAergic imbalance and neuroinflammation as two recently-discovered autism-related etiological mechanisms.




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