High Acetylcholine = learned helplessness, depression - What are good ways to lower acetylcholine or increase acetylcholinesterase activity?

cs3000

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Ray peat has spoken about the negatives of acetylcholine relating to stress and learning

Acetylcholine is an excitotoxic neurotransmitter
antagonism of either nicotinic or muscarinic ACh receptors can have antidepressant effects in humans and decrease stress-relevant behaviors in rodents

Acetylcholine likely raises serotonin in the brain (preferentially inhibits MAO-A in the brain)
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19025057/

AChE inhibitors raise acetylcholine levels -
finding things that raise acetylcholine is easy. AChE inhibition is common, you get this effect from many supplements because plants try to raise acetylcholine in pests to avoid getting eaten. which is why they're used as pesticides by humans too.

ray peat article:
Brain trauma consistently leads to decreased activity of this enzyme (Östberg, et al., 2011; Donat, et al., 2007), causing the acetylcholine produced in the brain to accumulate, with many interesting consequences. In 1997, a group (Pike, et al.) created brain injuries in rats to test the idea that a cholinesterase inhibitor would improve their recovery and ability to move through a maze. They found instead that it reduced the cognitive ability of both the injured and normal rats
A series of experiments that started at the University of California in 1960 found that rats that lived in larger spaces with various things to explore were better at learning and solving problems than rats that were raised in the standard little laboratory cages (Krech, et al., 1960). Studying their brains, they found that the enzyme cholinesterase, which destroys the neurotransmitter, acetylcholine, was increased. They later found that the offspring of these rats were better learners than their parents, and their brains contained more cholinesterase.
Their brains were also larger, with a considerable thickening of the cortex, which is considered to be the part mainly responsible for complex behavior, learning and intelligence.
Because cholinergic nerves have been opposed to the sympathetic, adrenergic, nerves, there has been a tendency to neglect their nerve exciting roles, when looking at causes of excitotoxicity, or the stress-induced loss of brain cells. Excessive cholinergic stimulation, however, can contribute to excitotoxic cell death, for example when it's combined with high cortisol and/or hypoglycemia.
In 1976 there was an experiment (Rosellini, et al.) that made an important link between the enrichment experiments and the learned helplessness experiments. The control animals in the enrichment experiments were singly housed, while the others shared a larger enclosure. In the later experiment, it was found that the rats "who were reared in isolation died suddenly when placed in a stressful swimming situation," while the group-housed animals were resistant, effective swimmers. Enrichment and deprivation have very clear biological meaning, and one is the negation of the other.

The increase of cholinesterase, the enzyme that destroys acetylcholine, during enrichment, serves to inactivate cholinergic processes. If deprivation does its harm by increasing the activity of the cholinergic system, we should expect that a cholinergic drug might substitute for inescapable stress, as a cause of learned helplessness, and that an anticholinergic drug could cure learned helplessness. Those tests have been done: "Treatment with the anticholinesterase, physostigmine, successfully mimicked the effects of inescapable shock." "The centrally acting anticholinergic scopolamine hydrobromide antagonized the effects of physostigmine, and when administered prior to escape testing antagonized the disruptive effects of previously administered inescapable shock."

another study:
A crucial finding is the loss of acetylcholinesterase activity with mitochondrial dysfunction globally in the brain of hypercholesterolemic mice


A simplified way of looking at this could be:
too little ACH = you get under-cognition + brainfog,
too much ACH = you get irritability + overthinking mind + depression/learned helplessness (e.g the state some people get by eating a lot of eggs high in choline) and maybe reduced learning performance too because of that.


looking around , specifically targetting acetylcholine in the HIPPOCAMPUS is especially connected to depression / mood
brain ACh levels increase in response to stressful challenges, whereas systemically blocking acetylcholinesterase (AChE, the primary ACh degradative enzyme) elicits depression-like symptoms in human subjects, and selectively blocking AChE in the hippocampus increases relevant behaviors in rodents
These studies suggest that ACh signaling results in maladaptive behavioral responses to stress if the balance of signaling is shifted toward increased hippocampal engagement.


some things i've found so far to lower acetylcholine:

scopolamine
(but not very accessable & unsure on toxicity in low doses
) (also very expensive transdermally - a patch takes >3 hours to hit effects levels for 50% of people, 8 hours to peak, stays elevated by 22 hrs, probably for 3 days https://www.researchgate.net/public...ity_in_combined_oral_and_transdermal_delivery)

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/209881
Acetylcholine (ACh) levels are elevated in actively depressed subjects
in a human trial , scopolamine (which reduces acetylcholine through antagonizing muscarinic receptors) reduces depression
88% performance vs 82% performance on the cognition test , so gave a slight reduction in cognition . but overall well tolerated on that dose.
Scopolamine produced rapid and robust antidepressant and antianxiety effects in patients with unipolar and bipolar depression.
Significant clinical responses were observed in the evaluation after the first scopolamine administration, 3 to 4 days after the first treatment
scopolamine hydrobromide (4 μg/kg intravenously)
orally - mice study tiny dose orally works and higher dose reverse effects? 0.1mg human
is the substance safe or toxic? plant is toxic , and high dose is a hallucinogen 60mg is used to induce memory impairment and 1mg also (swings too much the other way)

1677252820767.png



vitamin D ~5000IU for 5 weeks slightly reduces acetylcholine in the hippocampus,
and has a bigger reducing effect in the hypothalamus (similar effect in the hypothalamus with a high fat diet?)

Reduced acetylcholine synthesis in hippocampus and hypothalamus of rats in the current study after vitamin D supplementation was also approved in previous reports; vitamin D has been introduced as an important factor modifying the synthesis of several neuro-mediators like acetylcholine via increased gene expression of the enzyme choline acetyl-transferase (CAT)

12868_2017_400_Fig2_HTML.jpg



things that might have potential to look more at:
- iodine? (probably not in regular doses)
- tyrosine? (but impairs mitochondrial metoblism?)
- low dose bendryl? (but also reduces brain histamine more potently)
- cyproheptadine? (but bunch of other interactions also)


Please post more ways to decrease acetylcholine in the brain
 

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Jessie

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Adamantane, and it's derivatives, are potent ways to antagonize the cholinergic system. I'm sure LSD probably affects the cholinergic system similarly (but I haven't read anything about it).

The CIA got really interested in anticholinergics for a brief period because of their application as a "truth serum" of sorts. Law Enforcement use to be legally capable of spiking people's coffee or soda with scopolamine to obtain confessions. It was eventually outlawed, of course.

Even still, if you happen to be sitting in an interrogation room, don't ever accept drinks from cops.
 

xeliex

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Thanks for posting this cs3000 and interesting thoughts Jessie.
I know @Hans had an article on his website discussing acetylcholine.
 

youngsinatra

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T3, vitamin K, low-dose biotin, caffeine seem to lower acetylcholine.

I think avoiding most plant foods (natural containing and added pesticides) can help aswell. I think some on carnivore do better due to that.
 

youngsinatra

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But to me, avoiding procholinergic intake is even more important, because I cannot compensate for those with the things listed above.

For me it’s nightshades (esp. potatoes), blueberries (sometimes), red meat & oysters (zinc), most B vitamins, zinc supplements, vitamin E, fish oil, phosphatidylcholine (or alpha-GPC, CDP..)
 

youngsinatra

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I think the main detriment of high acetylcholine is bradycardia. (<60 bpm)

06E0E866-8392-400C-B1DA-E0C39DA95394.jpeg
 
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@youngsinatra But if you want an active bowel movement, will suppressing it too much have an upstream or downstream effect?
 

youngsinatra

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@youngsinatra But if you want an active bowel movement, will suppressing it too much have an upstream or downstream effect?
Yeah definitely. I think if you take antihistamine or anticholinergics medication (like benadryl, cyproheptadine, atropine) it will negatively affect digestion and motility.

But optimizing levels of active thyroid hormone, T3 (or reducing reverse T3 ) will stimulate motility, digestive enzyme production, stomach acid and bile flow and these are diminished in hypothyroidism.
 
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@youngsinatra Do you think there is something else that causes hypothyroidism or is the thyroid usually the primary cause in most homes?
 

youngsinatra

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@youngsinatra Do you think there is something else that causes hypothyroidism or is the thyroid usually the primary cause in most homes?
Oh, there are so many things that can interfere with it, even when the thyroid gland itself is healthy and not damaged or under attack by autoimmunity. (I think autoimmune thyroiditis accounts for 95% of hypothyroidism cases)

Any chronic physiological or psychological stressor can worsen it — be it trauma, chronic digestive issues, chronic unresolved infections, long-term caloric or carbohydrate restriction (or starvation), nutritional deficiency or excess, sleep deprivation and so much more..

Some things amplify the stress response like stored PUFAs, while others terminate it, like SFA.
 

pubh12

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T3, vitamin K, low-dose biotin, caffeine seem to lower acetylcholine.

I think avoiding most plant foods (natural containing and added pesticides) can help aswell. I think some on carnivore do better due to that.
Do you think a biotin defieincy could lead to high acetylcholine ? I won’t get into all the reasons I think mine is terribly high because I’ve made threads already but I’m having big time issues with it. I’m at the point I eat a couple pieces of chicken breast and my lungs are producing mucous and it’s blocking my airways. I’m basically drowning in it.
 

youngsinatra

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Do you think a biotin defieincy could lead to high acetylcholine ? I won’t get into all the reasons I think mine is terribly high because I’ve made threads already but I’m having big time issues with it. I’m at the point I eat a couple pieces of chicken breast and my lungs are producing mucous and it’s blocking my airways. I’m basically drowning in it.
Biotin competes with B5 (CoA) for absorption and indirectly might (!) lower acetylcholine. But not sure to be honest.

Sounds more like a histamine issue to me.
 

InChristAlone

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