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The original dopamine deficiency may be caused by a combination of factors: exposure to environmental pollutants, nutritional deficiencies, food or airborne allergies, stress of a high paced lifestyle, gastrointestinal injury and genetic vulnerabilities. These all combine to cause changes in brain chemistry which underlie the behavioral problems listed above.
It could be just a dietary deficiency of the necessary nutrients mentioned above. It could be a "brain allergy", such as a food allergy causing the deficiency. Most of the time, if it’s an allergy, it has something to do with casein (milk protein) or gluten (wheat protein). So it is wise to eliminate these offending foods from the diet. If the allergy is due to an airborne allergen, like pollen, then allergy shots may help.
If the allergy is due to Leaky Gut Syndrome, which allows proteins to leak into the bloodstream, causing an immune problem, that can also be tested for and treated properly. Intestinal damage can be caused by toxins in the environment and the free radical by-products created when the body rids itself of those toxins. The Nutrient Transfer® in NSR Focus helps heal the GI tract while delivering the necessary nutrients. Antioxidants also may help in this situation.
Supplementing the nutrients listed above may be enough to alleviate many ADD/ADHD symptoms. However, if the cause is due to a complicated combination of factors mentioned above, other companion treatments may be necessary.
The natural alternative, Focus, by Natural Solutions Research, Inc., is recent to the market. Focus contains the tyrosine and other nutrients needed to replenish dopamine, naturally. Since Focus is an all-food product, it is therefore much safer than drugs to bring about the control of ADD/ADHD!
References
Bornstein, R et al, Plazma Amino Acids in Attention Deficit Disorder Psychiatry Research 1990 33(3) 301-306
McConnell, H Catecholamine Metabolism in the Attention Deficit Disorder: Implications for the use of Amino Acid Precursor Therapy Medical Hypotheses 1985 17(4) 305-311
Nemzer, E et al, Amino Acid Supplementation as Therapy for Attention Deficit Disorder Journal of American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 1986 25(4) 509-513
Practice Parameters for the Assessment and Treatment of Children, Adolescents and Adults With Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Journal of American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 36:10 Supplement, October 1997
Shaywitz, S & Shaywitz, B Biologic Influences in Attentional Deficit Disorders in Levine, M et al Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics, W.B. Saunders Company, Philidelphia 1983
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