Judyann K. McNamara A holistic conventional paradigm v 1 Montreal Institute of Classical Homeopathy © 2014 1
THE NOUMEDYNAMIC HUMAN : A NEW HOLISTIC MEDICAL MODEL SUPPORTS KEY ELEMENTS OF HOMEOPATHIC PRACTICE AND POSSIBLY EXPLAINS THE MECHANISMS OF HOMEOPATHIC ACTION
THE NOUMEDYNAMIC HUMAN : A NEW HOLISTIC MEDICAL MODEL SUPPORTS KEY ELEMENTS OF HOMEOPATHIC PRACTICE AND POSSIBLY EXPLAINS THE MECHANISMS OF HOMEOPATHIC ACTION ................................................................................ 1 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................................................... 2 PART ONE: HOW EMERGING HOLISM IN CONVENTIONAL MEDICINE SUPPORTS THE PRIMARY PRINCIPLES OF HOMEOPATHIC CASE TAKING .............................................................................................................................. 4 PNEI -‐ Psycho-‐neuro-‐endocrine-‐immune stress responses leading to chronic disease ........... 5 Mitochondria as systemic mediators ............................................................................................................ 6 Important psychological factors ..................................................................................................................... 7 Allodynamic Regulation and Psychological Factors ............................................................................................................ 7 Compromised Susceptibility = Miasmatic loops = “Systems stuck in malfunctioning stress responses” .... 7
HOW STRIVING AND DELUSION CREATE DISEASE ............................................................................................... 8 The Conventional Model resembles the Aristotelian and Platonic Models of Soul ................... 8 The intimate relationship between perception and meaning ......................................................................................... 9 Sensations and the Individualization of Disease ................................................................................................................... 9 Meaning and Needs, Drives, Goals and Behaviour ............................................................................................................... 9 Striving or Goal Orientation, Achievement ........................................................................................................................... 10
Summary ................................................................................................................................................................ 10 The process by which stress and allodynamic load become disease. ....................................................................... 11
PART TWO: A POSSIBLE AND PLAUSIBLE MECHANISM OF HOMEOPATHIC ACTION UNCOVERED IN CONVENTIONAL MEDICINE .................................................................................................................................... 12 MITOCHONDRIA IN HEALTH AND DISEASE ........................................................................................................ 12 Mitochondria are the basis of adaptation and evolution .................................................................. 12 Mitochondria are the key components of the mechanism by which stress causes disease . 13 Mitochondria determine cell function and fate ..................................................................................... 14
THE MITOCHONDRIAL LINK ................................................................................................................................... 14 Mitochondria and the Hahnemannian Miasms ..................................................................................... 16 Mitochondria: the Quantum connection ................................................................................................... 17 A Bioenergetic Model and Mitochondria .................................................................................................. 17
MITOCHONDRIA: QUANTUM PORTALS TO THE UNDERLYING VITAL FIELD ................................................. 18 BRINGING EVERYTHING TOGETHER: THE NOUMEDYNAMIC HUMAN ............................................................ 20 THE BIG PICTURE: THE COMPLETE PICTURE OF HOMEOPATHY .................................................................... 21 GLOSSARY: ......................................................................................................................................... 22 BIBLIOGRAPHY ................................................................................................................................ 23
Judyann K. McNamara A holistic conventional paradigm v 1 Montreal Institute of Classical Homeopathy © 2014 2
INTRODUCTION
MICH has a developed an understanding of the human being and human pathogenesis which we are calling Noumedynamic. Noume- is related to the word noumenon. You may remember from Study Guide Year One Lesson 5 that “noumenon” is derived from the Latin “numen” which means deity, divine will or divine presence. “Noumenon” corresponds to Plato's “Form” —immaterial level of Reality that can only be apprehended by a non-sensory faculty, (and not by reason, as explained by Kant). The "noumenal" world is the world of the immaterial, the spiritual, the world of realities not accessible to the body's senses. The “noumedynamic” human incorporates the idea of the human being as driven by a “noumenal” force such as the soul.
At MICH, our understanding of pathogenesis involves a body-mind-soul, holistic and dynamic process (noumedynamic).
In this article I would like to illustrate how current perspectives in conventional medicine are moving towards a holistic model that supports the MICH understanding of pathogenesis. Perhaps even more importantly, is how these conventional perspectives are driving research towards discovering possible mechanisms by which homeopathic treatment affects the organism.
The key areas of research that are currently most relevant to homeopathy are those that have been looking at the effects of stress on the organism and its relationship to disease.
Stress, in its simplest form, is the application of, or resistance to, a force. Stress, by definition, is the process through which adaptation and evolution occur in response to externally and internally driven forces. Life is movement, a dynamic interaction of forces. Stress can be environmentally-induced or self-induced. Self-induced stress can be experienced as two forms: a force pushing the individual (striving) or a force resisting change or life (ego resistance).
In order to decipher the true cause to be treated in chronic disease, the homeopath must understand the individual's processes of adaptation and evolution (state of susceptibility).
In their clinical practice, homeopaths frequently encounter pathogenesis linked to self-induced stress. The causes and consequences of such self-induced stress, such as striving for an ideal beyond the grasp of the individual, are now well-documented by recent research, as this article will demonstrate. We will see that current research has also observed and recorded auditory and visual variations and distortions as well as other misinterpretations of the environment when striving occurs, supporting the notion of delusion as central to disease. Thus, research confirms the importance of delusion rubrics, and the delusion level revealed in case taking in homeopathic practice as a necessary element in considering a curative prescription, and striving as an important causal factor in the development of chronic disease (pathogenesis).
What current research also shows is that the discrepancy between the real and the perceived in a stressed individual causes another dimension of stress-related consequences on a very subtle level of biological organization. A graduate of MICH,
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and McGill University, Dr. Martin Picard, PhD., DHom., has expanded his research to a trans-disciplinary study of mitochondria. With Picard’s permission, I have used excerpts and images from his articles to share with MICH students and graduates. For a more in-depth understanding of mitochondria, refer to the list of his current publications in the bibliography.
Mitochondria are the sites of fundamental quantum energy exchange processes critical to life in every cell of every living organism. The first moment of evolutive life on earth was the moment when an organism capable of translating energy forms united with a bacteria cell. This union of two independent organisms formed the basis of the eukaryotic cell (one that has an enclosed nucleus) which could now evolve and adapt and allow all the life forms that exist on the planet to emerge. Mitochondria live in the cells of all evolved (only bacteria are not eukaryotic) living organisms acting as the cell's power producers. They convert energy into forms that are usable by the cell. Located in the cytoplasm, they are the sites of cellular respiration that generate fuel for the cell's activities. Mitochondria are also involved in innumerable other cell processes such as cell division, growth, cell death (apoptosis), adaptation and evolution.
Figure 1 Mitochondrial structure Figure 2 mitochrondria within eukaryotic cell
Because mitochondria are at the basis of life, evolution and all adaptation, they are logically the first line response to the related stress responses. Because they are found in every cell, they are systemic - sensitive to changes in the entire body, thus important to be considered in any holistic approach. As they are the seat of all fundamental quantum life processes, they are also logical candidates to being the mediators of quantum level homeopathic signals. The more we understand about mitochondria, the more they reveal themselves to be the logical receptors of homeopathic remedy waveforms.
Throughout this article all italics, bold, underlined phrases are my additions. Comments inside square brackets [ ] are my words.
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PART ONE: HOW EMERGING HOLISM IN CONVENTIONAL MEDICINE
SUPPORTS THE PRIMARY PRINCIPLES OF HOMEOPATHIC CASE
TAKING
We will begin with an overview of current conventional research and the emerging holistic vocabulary of science. This new vision and vocabulary is being birthed by transdisciplinary exchange between researchers searching the true causes of disease. This is illustrated in the words of prize winning researcher, Dr. Bruce McEwen, who has published over 700 research papers, introduced and developed the understanding of the body-mind mechanisms (allodynamic) that lead to chronic disease:
Holistic programs, such as a program that exemplifies combining education, physical activity, and social engagement—along with one other ingredient that is hard to quantify, namely, finding meaning and purpose in life, should serve as models of the kinds of interventions that can dramatically affect the course of chronic and prevalent health conditions via allodynamic brain mechanisms.
In his article, "Stress- and Allostasis-Induced Brain Plasticity", Dr. McEwen explains why science is just beginning to put the pieces together into a more holistic view: "Stress and stressful experiences have long been implicated in the etiology and pathophysiology of chronic physical and mental health conditions that now pose a great threat to public health. Historically, disciplinary variation in defining and studying stress and stressful experiences posed both methodological and conceptual challenges to the medical community's understanding of how an individual's health status could be affected by such complex processes over the life course. These challenges have been addressed by current perspectives, which build on recent advances in translational animal and human research and emphasize that the relationships between stressful experiences and health status depend on a dynamic interaction between genetic liability and exposure to environmental factors. This interaction begins in utero and continues until death."
"Allodynamic mechanisms" is a much broader and deeper development of homeostasis theory (see glossary). “Allo-“ means “other or different” : allodynamic mechanisms take into account “other or different” parameters relative to what has been considered conventionally.
Figure 3 Conventional holistic view of pathogenesis showing contributing factors of chronic disease (Dr. McEwen)
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In the same article, Dr. McEwen discusses the role of the brain to illustrate allodynamic processes in relationship to stress.
"The brain is the key organ of stress processes. It determines what individuals will experience as stressful, it orchestrates how individuals will cope with stressful experiences, and it changes both functionally and structurally as a result of stressful experiences. Within the brain, a distributed, dynamic, and plastic neural circuitry coordinates, monitors, and calibrates behavioral and physiological stress response systems to meet the demands imposed by particular stressors. These allodynamic processes can be adaptive in the short term (allostasis) and maladaptive in the long term (allostatic load). Critically, these processes involve bidirectional signaling between the brain and body.”
“The brain processes not only external sensory inputs from the environment but also internal inputs from the body. This parallel processing enables the brain to control and coordinate behavioral and physiological adjustments engendered by external or internal challenges to homeostasis. These adjustments can promote adaptation, such as calibrating cardiac output and peripheral vascular resistance to provide hemodynamic and metabolic support for large muscle groups needed for immediate or anticipated action (e.g., escape from a predator).”
PNEI - PSYCHO-NEURO-ENDOCRINE-IMMUNE
STRESS RESPONSES LEADING TO CHRONIC
DISEASE
The biological systems that promote such adaptation include the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, the autonomic nervous system, the metabolic system, the gut [as a center of intelligence or sensing], the kidneys, and the immune system (including the network of cytokine-producing cells throughout the body). The chief biomediators of these systems (e.g., cortisol, sympathetic and parasympathetic transmitters, cytokines, metabolic hormones) operate within a nonlinear, dynamic, and inter-active network.
Importantly, the activities of these systems and mediators are influenced by the genetic make-up, developmental history, and current behavioral and psychological states of the individual." [Italics mine.]
SOME USEFUL DEFINITIONS:
Homeostasis: a process wherein physiological parameters, such as blood oxygen and pH, are maintained in a narrow range, with limited recognition of the adaptive process. HPA: hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (Refer to a more depth definition of homeostasis in the glossary.) Allostasis: the active process of responding to a challenge to the body by triggering chemical mediators of adaptation (HPA, autonomic, metabolic, immune) that operate in a nonlinear network. Allostasis involves challenges or demands imposed by changes in (a) the environment and (b) an individual's behavioral state that are registered by the brain. Allostatic load: the wear-and-tear on the body and brain that results from chronic dysregulation (overactivity or inactivity) of mediators of allostasis.
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MITOCHONDRIA AS
SYSTEMIC MEDIATORS
What we now know is that mitochondria determine the changes that happen in the brain. Mitochondria are involved in the activation and duration of synapses, and the neuronal functions basic to memory and cognition.
See figure 4 to the left.
In fact, everything that Dr. McEwen attributed to the brain, the mitochondria can take credit for. It is the mitochondria that "pick up" subtle signals of what is happening inside the whole organism. Physical changes in the mitochondria have been observed whenever there is a change in concentration of any of the biomarkers that indicate stress (and possible ensuing chronic disease), as illustrated in figure 5 below:
From the same McEwen article: "Allostasis is essential for maintaining homeostasis in the face of external and internal demands that are registered by the brain. Critically, however, allodynamic adaptation has a price, and the cost of this adaptation is called allostatic load—the wear-and-tear on the body and brain. Allostatic systems promote adaptation to stressful experiences and are generally most useful when rapidly mobilized and terminated. [Acute reactions]. When they are prolonged or not terminated promptly [what we call miasmatic responses], allostatic systems undermine mental and physical health."
Figure 5 Biomarkers of allostatic load shown to affect mitochondria (Dr. Martin Picard)
Figure 4 Mitochondrial role in brain plasticity (Dr. Martin Picard)
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IMPORTANT PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS
McEwen continues: "An important aspect of allostasis and allostatic load is the notion of anticipation...psychological states, such as apprehension, worry, and anxiety, as well as cognitive preparation for a forthcoming event. Anticipation arising from neural activity within the brain can drive the output of allostatic biomediators, and it is likely that states of prolonged anxiety and anticipation can result in allostatic load. Other important aspects of individual responses to stress in relation to allostasis and allostatic load are health-damaging and health-promoting behaviors such as smoking, alcohol consumption, sleep, diet, and physical activity, collectively called lifestyle behaviors. These may be embodied within the overall notion of allostasis—i.e., how individuals adapt to and cope with a challenge—and they also contribute to allostatic load.”
ALLODYNAMIC REGULATION AND PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS
What kind of challenge leads us to health-damaging behaviors, and states of prolonged anxiety and anticipation? Leaving McEwen for now, let us turn to some leading edge research in behavioral psychology that also uses this new "allodynamic" terminology to bridge into a more holistic view that provides the answer to this question.
The following excerpts have been taken from the book: "Infant child mental health, early intervention, and relationship based therapies" by Connie Lillas and Janiece Turnbull.
“Allodynamic regulation involves not only the central nervous system but also autonomic nervous systems that support behavioral flexibility and adaptability. Allodynamic regulation explains that higher neural controls can bypass, inhibit, or modulate regulatory mechanisms (e.g. thoughts can affect physiology and vice versa).” [In other words, stress is also thought and behavior based, and signs of stress are seen in the loss or reduction of the individual’s ability to be flexible and adaptable (reduced susceptibility).]
“Synchronistic with the loss of mental and behavioral flexibility (diminished freedom of response), is that systems become stuck in chronic or malfunctioning stress responses [what we call the miasms or “loops”], leading to risk factors for allostatic load.”
“Allostatic load conditions can be assumed when one of three primary stress states of autonomic arousal – the hypo alert, hyper alert, or flooded state dominates the landscape. In addition, a sleep related stress response is the inability to cycle into deep sleep. Stress responses are in and of themselves not unhealthy, in fact, they are intrinsic part of typical development and are necessary for adaptive functioning." [Or, what we at MICH call "susceptibility".]
COMPROMISED SUSCEPTIBILITY = MIASMATIC LOOPS = “SYSTEMS
STUCK IN MALFUNCTIONING STRESS RESPONSES”
The authors then describe the loss of susceptibility (as we know it) as the key indicator of a disturbance that can lead to disease: "When the underlying activating and inhibiting processes within the stress response cycle: 1. occur too frequently; 2. do not accommodate to situations that should no longer be stressful; or 3. stay on too
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long or do not shut down after the stressor is removed; or 4. are inadequate in their stress recovery, the allodynamic load creates wear and tear on internal organs. In short, because of their persistence, states become traits. (Perry, Pollard, Blakely, Baker, and vigilante, 1995)"
"Furthermore certain risk factors increase the likelihood that stress reactions become load conditions...Such as: the individual's experience of a real or perceived challenge that is beyond his or her reach, [what we call "striving"], or the individual's experience of real or perceived threat [or the "delusion", as termed by Rajan Sankaran].
The answer to our question: “What kind of challenge leads us to health-damaging behaviors, and states of prolonged anxiety and anticipation?” is answered: “ a real or perceived challenge that is beyond an individual’s reach”. Thus “striving” is key to the entire pathogenesis. Let’s see how researchers explain how striving and perceived threats (delusions)…become pathology.
HOW STRIVING AND DELUSION CREATE DISEASE The current medical paradigm uses the concept of four (sometimes five) “brain systems” to describe “intelligence centers” within the organism, but not located in an organ as such. These intelligence centers correspond to what Aristotle (in De Anima or Soul) identified as the three levels of soul (Sensory, Locomotive and Spiritual or Mental level) reflected in biological activity, which Plato said inspired Logos, or logistikon (mind, nous, or reason), Thymos, or thumetikon (emotion, or spiritedness), and Eros, or epithumetikon (appetitive, or desire)
THE CONVENTIONAL MODEL RESEMBLES THE ARISTOTELIAN AND
PLATONIC MODELS OF SOUL
In the words of researchers, Lillas and Turnbull, [all italics are mine] “In the neuro-relational conventional framework, each of the four brain system heuristics captures a fundamental influence [soul level] underlying behavior:
1. Arousal (the regulatory system); [Sensory/Spiritual]
2. Sensory processing and modulation (sensory system); [Sensory]
3. Emotional reactivity, memory, and meaning making (the relevance system); [Spiritual] and
4. Motor activity and behavioral control (the executive system) [or Locomotive]
Each system is affiliated with general and specific anatomical regions in the brain as well as general and specific behavioral states. The structural interconnectivity among systems allows for infinite patterns of interaction to support and drive behavior. In other words, no single brain system could ever stake a claim for always initiating or completely governing any given behavior.
1. Arousal states are located along a continuum from low to high-energy expression:
Low - coma, sleep, drowsy, hypo alert, alert, hyper alert, flooded - High
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2. Sensory information: Brains translate energy in the world into sensory information…These include the visual, auditory, and somatosensory processing regions in the occipital, temporal, and power yet to lobes, respectively, and the vestibular, gustatory, and olfactory processing regions in the limbic regions. As the sensory modalities integrate with each other and with [all four] brain systems, the sensory information becomes represented within personal meanings and contextual significance. Variations in physiology or environment from person-to-person set the stage for vast individual differences in sensory processing parameters.” [Or, as Hahnemann said: “each individual case of disease”]
THE INTIMATE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PERCEPTION AND MEANING
“Sensory information is not processed in a purely bottom-up hierarchal fashion; context also determines the meaning of perception. In other words, the meaning that an object or event being perceived holds for the individual is dependent on its contextual significance and personal relevance.
For example a cup may represent its traditional meaning in one context or serve an entirely different function as well. In this way one’s past experience, the sensory information, and one's contextual goals in the moment also influence the ultimate "meaning" that is shaped from sensory data.
Although we tend to focus on visual and auditory sensations, more recently the brain regions that process bodily sensations such as touch and gut feelings have gained more attention, large the due to a renewed interest and emotional processes, the body as it relates to mind, and connections among emotions and actions. (Damasio, 1999; Dolan, 2007).”
SENSATIONS AND THE INDIVIDUALIZATION OF DISEASE
“The importance of sensations is twofold. First, sensory experiences provide the core foundation for how we perceive our bodies in the world. Just as we each have a unique fingerprint, we also have a unique makeup of sensory receptors and pathways that underlies individual differences in perception and experience. Because of these individual sensory prints, the same center event could yield a broad range of responses across individuals. An experience it is pleasurable to one can be repulsive to another, novel to one and boring to another, safe to one and challenging or threatening to another.
Second, a sensory processing to disruption, from mild to severe, can throw off the quality of sensory information, both within and across systems.”
MEANING AND NEEDS, DRIVES, GOALS AND BEHAVIOUR
“3. The Relevance system [Mental or Spiritual Soul level] determines what is salient to the three large domains of emotion, memory, and meaning making. Memories of events and their emotional impact are shaped from their meanings. We tend to remember and be more emotionally sensitive to things that are meaningful to us. Research shows that when directing attention to the same spatial location or witnessing the same event, two people can and usually do, focus on and recall different things. We get two different responses from asking two different people to share the meanings associated with the same witnessed event. What is deemed relevant to the individual and what personal meanings emerge, lead to tremendous
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variability in behaviors, as well as tremendous complexity in unraveling the contributions to any given behavior.
The “Relevance system” links the state of the body to the perceived state of the environment. (Mesulam, 2000b) The Relevance System is informed by emotions, which determine what is worth expending energy and attention on, and what to approach and what to avoid. Emotions tag what is important to remember; memory informs emotion through the capacity to recall the valence and meaning of past experience. (LeBar Cabeza 2006) Private meanings may or may not be shared in the context of intimate relationships. Some are more easily observed in behavior and create social connections such as hobbies, politics, and traditions.
It is called the relevance system because its primary goal is to link up sensory and motor information with emotional and behavioral significance, the linking process is all about what is relevant. It has to do with an organism's state (its needs, drives, goals) as well as the opportunities and constraints present within the environment.”
STRIVING OR GOAL ORIENTATION, ACHIEVEMENT
“4. The Executive System [Locomotive level of Soul integrated with will] is concerned with: what to do, how to do it, and when to do it. The executive system is about movement: it's initiation or in addition, that promotes the achievement of goals. Even thinking, typically considered a purely cognitive task, is ultimately concerned with some type of action [Tweed, 2003].
The functions of the executive system involve control of goal oriented behavior (actions, emotions, and thoughts) in real time and are primarily associated with frontal lobes of the brain (Mesulam, 2002). The prefrontal cortex orchestrates a synchrony among the four systems, with each system honoring its affiliations and responding to its goals within the context of overall adaptation.”
SUMMARY
It is interesting to see how research is slowly revealing the importance of individualizing the disease process. What is even more interesting, is that this research has isolated and focused on the same primary individualizing factors that MICH homeopaths use in soul based prescribing: 1) striving for an ideal beyond the capacity of the individual; 2) the “delusion” caused by the interpretation of sensory input through the meaning or symbolic significance held by the individual; and 3) the sensations which are also individualized and significant, and 4) the symbolic or representational meaning driving an individual’s focus (obsession, compulsion).
In the figure below we see the different elements that come together to create the chronic stress response that is core to the expression of allodynamic load and chronic disease.
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THE PROCESS BY WHICH STRESS AND ALLODYNAMIC LOAD BECOME
DISEASE.
Figure 6 Allodynamic Model of Disease (Judyann McNamara 2013)
Delusion: As If
Physical sxAlterations,
changes
Imagination
Interpretation
Mis-information
Mental-Emotional reactions & stress responses
Stress response cycles that occur too frequently, stay on too long, do not shut
down, do not recover
Relevance system:
Narrow focus on one
"meaningful" aspect
that is out of the reach
of the individual
Brain interprets everything
according to this focus
Affecting perception,
causing mis
interpretation of
environment
Symbolic
representations
Respiratory and metabolic functions
compromised
Obsessive thinking, fixation affects lifestyle
choices
Disturbed susceptibility, adaptability
Fixed reactions and Compensations
Loss of flexibility and adaptability
Executive system
promotes
achievement of
associated goals The aspect causes a
specific type of
arousal state
Also Affecting sensory
information with
personal meanings
and signficance1
2
3
4Striving
Affecting sensory
receptors and
pathways
Allodynamic disease process
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PART TWO: A POSSIBLE AND PLAUSIBLE MECHANISM OF
HOMEOPATHIC ACTION UNCOVERED IN CONVENTIONAL MEDICINE The next subject of this article addresses the actual mechanism by which disease occurs, which in homeopathy, as the law of similar is also how cure happens through homeopathic treatment. We will look at recent mitochondrial research that potentially provides the actual mechanism through which an individual’s state of body-mind-soul becomes a physical disease. It is this mitochondrial mediation that would be the prime candidate in considering the site and mechanism through which homeopathic intervention takes place.
Dr. Picard (PhD, DHom) says through his work with mitochondria he hopes “to further establish the basis of mind-body interactions, expand the biomedical model, and hopefully lead to the design of higher-level health-promoting interventions based on principles of allostasis and bioenergetics.”
Picard continues: “In the ongoing revolution in health sciences where we seek a complete understanding of biological health processes in relation to the psycho-social environment, considerable leaps in knowledge about human health will stem from addressing research questions directly intersecting biological and social disciplines. One particular subject of scientific inquiry that can connect these realms and generate truly trans-disciplinary knowledge of benefit to society are cellular mitochondria, which link social, metabolic and genomic regulation. The current hypothesis is that mitochondrial act as cellular portal on the environment. Identifying how mitochondria sense and integrate stress-induced metabolic perturbations, and then translate that information into known disease-associated (epi)genomic processes, will build a solid foundation for investigating the link between psycho-social factors and health processes.”
MITOCHONDRIA IN HEALTH AND DISEASE
MITOCHONDRIA ARE THE BASIS OF ADAPTATION AND EVOLUTION
Dr. Picard (PhD, DHom) offers the following explanation of Mitochondria: “Mitochondria are at the origin of complex life. The first hint that mitochondria plays a central role in human health and disease is their requirement for the emergence of complex multicellular life forms, including as humans. About 1.5 billion years ago, the ancestor of the human cell (proto-eukaryotic cell) incorporated an aerobic bacterium capable of using oxygen for cellular energy production. The bacterium then became the mitochondrion with many remnant characteristics of its bacterial origin, including a double membrane, the ability to physically interact, and its own circular genome known as the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). The mtDNA is present in 100-1000’s of copies per cell and encodes essential element of the respiratory chain, where the oxygen we breathe and foods we eat are converted to cellular energy.
Attesting to its importance, mtDNA defects cause severe inherited diseases in ~1:6,000 people worldwide, are involved in the pathogenesis of a number of chronic conditions including diabetes8, neurodegeneration, and contribute to the aging process. Thus, mitochondria play a central role in cellular health and mitochondrial pathogenesis entails a significant social health burden.”
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MITOCHONDRIA ARE THE KEY COMPONENTS OF THE MECHANISM BY
WHICH STRESS CAUSES DISEASE
“In relation to stress, mitochondria have been regarded as a key component of the stress response largely due to their role in energy production and capacity to generate cellular signals that promote cellular adaptation. Mitochondrial energy capacity may in part determine the limits of an organism’s adaptive capacity, with substantial mitochondrial content and optimal function being related to maximal resilience, whereas reduced content and impaired mitochondrial function being related to vulnerability to mild and repeated stressors.
“Among the aspects of mitochondrial function that influence cell function and adaptation are dynamic changes in mitochondrial morphology via processes of fusion and fission. This results in longer/bigger or shorter/smaller mitochondria, respectively. Mitochondrial ‘shape-shifting’ is linked to functional changes that impact cell function which is particularly important in the context of adaptation to metabolic perturbations. Mitochondria acutely respond to cell stress signals by undergoing life-promoting networking through fusion. In contrast, prolonged and/or too severe stress leads to widespread mitochondrial fragmentation and dismantlement of the mitochondrial network. Functionally, excessive and prolonged fragmentation of mitochondria is associated with accumulation of mtDNA damage and increased oxidative stress, such that the adverse health outcomes related to chronic metabolic stress (i.e., such as in diabetes) could be caused by chronic perturbations in mitochondrial dynamics and consequent accumulation of mtDNA damage. This would contribute to accelerate the cellular aging process.
Figure 7 Mitochondria morphology and health (Dr. Martin Picard)
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MITOCHONDRIA DETERMINE CELL FUNCTION AND FATE
“Likely as a result of their role in the evolution of complex life forms, mitochondria also exert a strong regulatory role on cell fate. The process of cellular development and differentiation is influenced by mitochondrial function. Likewise, the flipside biological process of programmed cell death is closely regulated by mitochondrial signals. For instance, the release of bacterial-like pro-apoptotic factors (e.g., apoptosis-inducing factor – AIF, cytochrome c) from mitochondria as a result of prolonged mitochondrial stress are potent inducers of cell death. Stresses deemed insurmountable by individual cells lead to mitochondrial fragmentation and apoptotic signaling that activate cell death. Notably, defects in this and other mitochondrial processes can promote cancer development. Like the accumulation of mtDNA damage, increased production of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) and apoptotic signaling are features of aging tissues. Thus, mitochondria are functionally positioned at the crossroad of energy metabolism, cell function, death and aging. Therefore, because biological systems need to be in tune with their environment to sustain normal function, it comes as no surprise that mitochondria exhibit astute sensitivity to stress hormones and metabolic perturbations.”
Figure 8 Mitochondria and allostatic load (Dr. Martin Picard, MAL 2013)
THE MITOCHONDRIAL LINK Picard has coined the term “MAL” or “mitochondrial allostatic load” in demonstrating the role mitochondria have in stress response. “Mitochondrial
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allostatic load (MAL) refers to the structural and functional changes that mitochondria undergo in response to elevated glucose, poor lifestyle habits, [mental-emotional and social stress], aging and stress pathophysiology. Stress hormones seem to have a damaging “primary effect” on mitochondria, cellular dysfunction and senescence.”
Perhaps as a result of their central role in the evolution of biological complexity, mitochondria have developed astute sensitivity to primary stress mediators, enabling tight matching of bioenergetics with the stress response. The bioenergetics reactions are part of Mitochondrial Allostatic Load (MAL) or, a chronic activation of allostatic mechanisms at the level of mitochondria (excessive mitochondrial fragmentation, ROS production, respiratory deficiency and mtDNA damage).
Importantly, the signals released by mitochondria cause known downstream primary, secondary and tertiary health outcomes (see Figure 9 below).”
Figure 9 Effects mediated by mitochondria (Dr. Martin Picard, MAL 2013)
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MITOCHONDRIA AND THE HAHNEMANNIAN MIASMS
The following diagram of some preliminary research shows that the mitochondria respond to stress by turning on and off certain genes (epigenetics) in the cellular nucleus in order to try to find a mutation that will work. At a certain level of stress induced toxicity (around 50%), the mitochondria stop experimenting and develop a steady state seemingly similar to sycosis. Further stress and toxicity leads to a “reboot” (cancer) or destructive actions like cell death (syphilis).
Lifestyle, Stress, Nutrition, Environment
Mitochondrial DNAMutations
0%
Acute
30%
Psora
50%
Sycosis
70% 100%
Cancer/TB Syphyllis
Adaptive/evolutionary strategies
Nutritive Toxicity
Generative Degeneration
Hahnemannian Miasmatic Diagnosis
Poor lifestyle habits such as: lack of exercise, excessive intake of sugar, alcohol, fat, food; and/or m/e stress; and/or environmental toxicity; and/or medication induced toxicity can separately or in combination, contribute to allodynamic load.
Allodynamic load measures degrees of “wear and tear” on the organism, related to its ability to respond, adapt and evolve.
Cellular Mitochondria respond to allodynamic load by undergoing dynamic morphological and functional changes leading to aging and chronic disease.
As mutations occur, the mitochondria seemingly cause gene expression to occur in different areas of the nuclear DNA. At the 50% mark, experimentation with gene expression stops, producing a steady state with similar characteristics to the sycosis miasm, wrt toxicity, accumulation, reduced adaptability.
Genome DNA Mutations
Allodynamic load
Figure 10 Mitochondrial damage and miasms (Judyann McNamara, 2013)
Judyann K. McNamara A holistic conventional paradigm v 1 Montreal Institute of Classical Homeopathy © 2014 17
MITOCHONDRIA: THE QUANTUM CONNECTION
In summary, it is becoming increasingly clear that mitochondria determine everything that happens in the cell: from division, to respiration, and function, to death. It is important to remember that the most important functions of a living organism are quantum effects that occur within the cristae of the mitochondria. The Kreb’s cycle, the basis of metabolism and energy transformation are primary functions of the mitochondria. Most recently, Dr. Picard has observed field effects and coherency behavior between the mitochondria that might indicate that they are “informed” quantumly by an underlying organizational field. (vital field).
A BIOENERGETIC MODEL AND MITOCHONDRIA
Twenty or more years of experience and research at HeartMath institute has provided the world with the first electromagnetic waveform maps of the human being. The electromagnetic waveforms are of greatest density around the heart. Interestingly, Picard has found that the mitochondria in heart cells illustrate the clearest force field effects.
Figure 11 Bio Energetic fields (HeartMath Institute)
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MITOCHONDRIA: QUANTUM PORTALS TO THE UNDERLYING VITAL
FIELD
The proposal this article is making is that mitochondria are “informed” by an underlying field, the vital field. As the primary structures related to adaptation and evolution, they also bridge the environment (larger reality) with the perceived inner reality of the individual. They determine if, when and how the organism will adapt to the environment. Or, as Dr. Steve Cole,another leading researcher in the field of mitochondria, said in an article published in the most prestigious scientific journal “Nature” "[...] the way people see the world could affect everything from their risk of chronic illnesses such as diabetes and heart disease to the progression of conditions such as HIV and cancer." (The Pursuit of Happiness, Jo Marchant, November 2013)
As Picard puts it: “Mitochondria sense the metabolic environment. These subcellular organelles constantly move about within cells and undergo processes of fusion and fission, collectively termed MITOCHONDRIAL DYNAMICS. Through mitochondrial dynamics, they oscillate between thread (fused, elongated) and grain (round, fragmented) morphology, exchanging mtDNA and proteins in the process. Importantly, mitochondrial shape and function are mutually linked, and are highly responsive to the metabolic environment…There are dynamic membrane bridges between adjacent mitochondria, where the exchange of non-molecular information in the form of electromagnetic radiation and other bioenergetics field effects are produced and sensed within the [quantum] electron transport chain.”
Recent research shows that the mitochondria are also susceptible to physical, mental and emotional states in the organism as a whole. As research shows, when the individual perceives challenges beyond his or her reach, perceptions are altered, and stress responses become fixed, creating a dichotomy between the real external environment and what is perceived by the individual.
Figure 12, on the following page, illustrates the relationship between the underlying informative field of the soul or the vital field channelled by the mitochondria, the external environmental conditions, and the internal conditions as perceived by the individual.
The top section of the figure illustrates a situation of optimal health and susceptibility. When the difference between the external and perceived realities are somewhat consistent, the mitochondria can coherently channel the vital field to enable to cell and the organism to adapt to changing conditions, and evolve. In this scenario, the mitochondria show themselves to be fusional, in close contact and together, as a group forming a coherent image of an underlying electromagnetic field through the alignment of their cristae.
When the difference between perception and reality increases, this coherency is lost. Perhaps with this loss is the loss of adaptation, freedom of response and the possibility of evolution.
When the difference reaches a certain threshold, the mitochondria change shape (balloon out) and become dysfunctional.
If environmental factors are too extreme, they lose their shape completely, become pale and anemic, and begin a process that will lead to the death of the cell in which they are enclosed (alternate scenario in figure 12 below).
Judyann K. McNamara A holistic conventional paradigm v 1 Montreal Institute of Classical Homeopathy © 2014 19
Mitochondria as Bioenergetic Portals
External/Internal Environment
as perceived by the individual
Mitochondria are quantum portals into underlying
vital field
Form a coherent image Informed by the Vital field
created by the soul
External/Internal Environment
as perceived is close to external reality
External EnvironmentWithin reasonable
limits
External Environment Within reasonable
limits
External/Internal Environment
as perceived is not congruent w external reality
External/Internal Environment
as perceived is too far to be bridged to external
Optimal adaptation and susceptibilty
Loss of coherency
Dysfunction
External Environment NOT within reasonable
limits
External/Internal Environment
as perceived is too far to be bridged to external Dysfunction
Alternate scenario
External Environment
External EnvironmentWithin reasonable
limits
Figure 12 Mitochondrial response to misperceptions within the individual (Judyann McNamara)
Figure 12 Mitochondria as bioenergetic portals (McNamara)
Judyann K. McNamara A holistic conventional paradigm v 1 Montreal Institute of Classical Homeopathy © 2014 20
MIt BRINGING EVERYTHING TOGETHER: THE NOUMEDYNAMIC HUMAN We can now add the corresponding synchronistic physical process (grey boxes) to our earlier figure 6 representing the allodynamic disease process. This additional information provides the link between the mental-emotional-spiritual levels of expression and the physical expression of disease. With the help of homeopathic experience we are able to fill in the source of the “meaningful” symbol that both inspires and mesmerizes the individual into a striving, delusional state that leads to disease.
Figure 13 the Noumedynamic Human (Judyann McNamara, 2014)
Judyann K. McNamara A holistic conventional paradigm v 1 Montreal Institute of Classical Homeopathy © 2014 21
THE BIG PICTURE: THE COMPLETE PICTURE OF HOMEOPATHY In figure 14 below, the complete process of pathogenesis is shown. The many branches of homeopathy reveal their association with a specific aspect of the disease process. One can easily imagine that the remedy emerging from each level of the process provides a specific signal to the mitochondria, informing it of that level of organization, or disorganization within the organism. One can see how each method complements the other, and how clinical experience evolved to probe into deeper levels of disturbance to finally arrive at the source of the original dis-ease. This schematic may help us begin to use the complementary homeopathic approaches in a way that supports the mitochondria in its quantum role of allodynamic adaptation and evolution.
Perfection or absolute
misinterpreted as opposite,
conflictual extremes: duality
Physical sx
Alterations, changes
Delusion "As if"
Imagination
Interpretation
Mis-information
Mental-Emotional reactions & stress responses
Feelings and emotions
Divine image
Symbolic
representations
Obsessive thinking, fixation affects lifestyle choices
Disturbed susceptibility, adaptability
Ego Interpretation
Comparison,
Competition,
Contrariness
Sleep, taste, appetite, thirst
Sensations
Masi, Soul Level Rx
Mineral Sensation
Animal Sensation
Plant Sensation
Miasms, rubrics, Sissu
OrganotherapyComplexes
Massimo
Scholten
Sankaran miasms
Hahnemannian miasms: mtDNAGenomic
Fixed Reactions and Compensations
Sankaran et al
Creation of the false self, Unnecessary suffering, Catch 22
Body-mind confluence
Figure 14 Homeopathic Interventions at different stages of pathogenesis
Judyann K. McNamara A holistic conventional paradigm v 1 Montreal Institute of Classical Homeopathy © 2014 22
GLOSSARY:
Allostasis: The process whereby an organism maintains physiological stability (homeostasis) by changing parameters of its internal milieu by matching them appropriately to environmental demands.
Allostatic load: Allostatic load (AL) is the biological ‘wear and tear’ that chronic stress exacts on organs and tissues that, when prolonged, ultimately predisposes the organism to disease. AL arises when the individual chronically experiences prolonged or poorly regulated allostatic (stress) responses.
Allostatic Overload: Both Allostatic load and Allostatic overload (which is an extreme form of allostatic load occur in nature and are important in adaptation and evolution. An example of allostatic load is a bear putting on fat for the winter that they then burn off. Allostatic overload is a salmon dying after migration and mating. Allostatic overload involves the dysregulation of allostatic responses, coupled with health-damaging behaviors (poor sleep, increased caloric intake, smoking, alcohol and lack of exercise) lead to chronic disease or death.
Allodynamic regulation: Berntson and Cacioppo expand the concept of allostasis into their theory of allodynamic regulation (2000,2007) to highlight the reciprocal interactions between the central [top-down] and autonomic [Bottom-up] nervous systems that support behavioral flexibility and adaptability [Burntson et al 2003].
Allodynamic regulation explains that higher neural controls can bypass, inhibit, or modulate regulatory mechanisms, thereby altering regulatory setpoints. The concept of allodynamic regulation accords more complex connectivity and greater flexibility to the target visceral parameters. For example, higher level control means that internal and external conditions can influence the visceral regulation and vice versa. (e.g.thoughts can affect physiology and vice versa)
Homeostasis: also spelled homoeostasis or homœostasis (from Greek: ὅµοιος, "hómoios", "similar", and στάσις, stásis, "standing still". Homeostasis is the ability to maintain a constant internal environment in response to environmental changes. It is a central theory at the basis of allopathy.
Among the assumptions of homeostatic theory is 1. that organisms attempt to maintain homeostasis--a balanced physiological state or equilibrium--by constantly adjusting themselves to the demands of the environment. And, 2. that every living being has certain biological needs--sex, hunger, thirst--that are caused by imbalance, which become the motivators for all behavior.
Stress: A real or interpreted threat to an individual’s physiological and psychological integrity that results in biological and behavioral responses115.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
(1) Stress- and Allostasis-Induced Brain Plasticity, Bruce S. McEwen1 and Peter J. Gianaros2
Annu. Rev. Med. 2011. 62:5.1–5.15 The Annual Review of Medicine is online at med.annualreviews.org. 10.1146/annurev-med-052209-100430 Copyright c 2011 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved 0066-4219/11/0218-0001
List of Dr. Martin Picard’s Publications to date.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/myncbi/10YJmwC9Q5RA8/bibliography/40088418/public/?sort=date&direction=descending.
Other references pertaining to Mitochondrial role in health:
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Wallace DC and Fan W. Energetics, epigenetics, mitochondrial genetics. Mitochondrion. 2010;10:12-31. Durieux J, Wolff S and Dillin A. The cell-non-autonomous nature of electron transport chain-mediated longevity. Cell. 2011;144:79-91. Schroeder EA, Raimundo N and Shadel GS. Epigenetic silencing mediates mitochondria stress-induced longevity. Cell Metab. 2013;17:954-64. DiMauro S and Schon EA. Mitochondrial respiratory-chain diseases. N Engl J Med. 2003;348:2656-68. Picard M and al. e. Progressive Changes in mtDNA 3243A>G Heteroplasmy Results in Abrupt Epigenomic Transitions in Gene Expression Profile. Science. Under review. Wexler BE. Brain and culture: Neurobiology, ideology and social change. Cambridge: MIT Press; 2006. Braschi E and McBride HM. Mitochondria and the culture of the Borg: Understanding the integration of mitochondrial function within the reticulum, the cell, and the organism. Bioessays. 2010;32:958-66. Santo-Domingo J, Giacomello M, Poburko D, Scorrano L and Demaurex N. OPA1 promotes pH flashes that spread between contiguous mitochondria without matrix protein exchange. EMBO J. 2013;32:1927-40. Eells JT, Wong-Riley MT, VerHoeve J, Henry M, Buchman EV, Kane MP, Gould LJ, Das R, Jett M, Hodgson BD, Margolis D and Whelan HT. Mitochondrial signal transduction in accelerated wound and retinal healing by near-infrared light therapy. Mitochondrion. 2004;4:559-67. Zorzano A, Liesa M, Sebastian D, Segales J and Palacin M. Mitochondrial fusion proteins: dual regulators of morphology and metabolism. Semin Cell Dev Biol. 2010;21:566-74. Sharpley MS, Marciniak C, Eckel-Mahan K, McManus M, Crimi M, Waymire K, Lin CS, Masubuchi S, Friend N, Koike M, Chalkia D, Macgregor G, Sassone-Corsi P and Wallace DC. Heteroplasmy of Mouse mtDNA Is Genetically Unstable and Results in Altered Behavior and Cognition. Cell. 2012;151:333-43. Ferraresi C, Hamblin MR and Parizotto NA. Low-level laser (light) therapy (LLLT) on muscle tissue: performance, fatigue and repair benefited by the power of light. Photonics & lasers in medicine. 2012;1:267-286. Kobayashi M, Takeda M, Sato T, Yamazaki Y, Kaneko K, Ito K, Kato H and Inaba H. In vivo imaging of spontaneous ultraweak photon emission from a rat's brain correlated with cerebral energy metabolism and oxidative stress. Neurosci Res. 1999;34:103-13.