OCD Treatment

 

NeuroResearch Clinics, Inc.

 

AMA Category 1

 

Continuing Medical Education

 

The Queen's Locks Amsterdam the Netherlands photo by Marty L. Hinz, MD  
   
OCD Treatment

OCD Treatment

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OCD Treatment

Written by: Marty L. Hinz, MD
President Clinical Research
NeuroResearch Clinics, Inc.
Cape Coral, Florida USA Research Office  
   
 

OCD Treatment

The NeuroResearch Clinics treatment advance.

  Repetitive thoughts (obsessions) thoughts during OCD Treatment (OCD) leading to repetitive behaviors (compulsions) have proven difficult for medicine to treat.

  But what if? You could abruptly as turning off a light switch, the obsessive thoughts stopped and the repetitive compulsive behavior stopped abruptly stopping in patients suffering from OCD?

  Results such as this are not possible for most people treated with prescription drugs. The cause of OCD is not a drug deficiency it is a deficiency of the serotonin and dopamine neurotransmitter systems.

  The treatment approach of NeuroResearch Clinics in treating OCD allows observation of what happens when the light switch controlling OCD is turned off leading to abrupt cessation of obsessive thoughts and compulsive repetitive behaviors.

  Some patients simply emerge from their disease into a new life with no further problems. Other patients may react in an unexpected ways at which point the treatment challenge is not getting symptoms under control during OCD Treatment but integrating the patient back into a normal life. In these cases the patient, family, and other people close to the patient may need to be included in treatment to get the patient support needed to make the transition into life without OCD.

  In these patients the challenge becomes learning to live life without OCD symptoms as the world continues to react to them as if the disease and its symptoms were still active. The key may be psychotherapy focused not just on the patient but to include immediate family members and other close to the patient in order to learn to live and react to life during OCD Treatment without symptoms. The main cause of symptom relapse under the NeuroResearch Clinics OCD Treatment approach is not that treatment is not working as is the case with prescription drugs, it is the struggle of integrating some patients, family and other people close to the patient back into a normal life in the face of abrupt control of symptoms. While most patient do well after symptoms are controlled, some patients experience a challenge in living a normal disease free life, quit their treatment and go back living life as it was prior to OCD Treatment. It is sad when this happens where the patient takes the stand it is easier to crawl under a rock and live with the disease than to come out in the sun light with the rest of the world and live symptoms free.

OCD Treatment

STANDARD MEDICAL TREATMENT

  MDs (medical doctors) provide OCD Treatment primarily with counseling (psychotherapy) and prescription drugs, neither of which are very effective.

  The primary drugs used to in OCD Treatment are the following "reuptake inhibitors":

  • Clomipramine (Anafranil)
  • Fluvoxamine (Luvox)
  • Fluoxetine (Prozac)
  • Paroxetine (Paxil)
  • Sertraline (Zoloft)

  Each of these drugs do nothing to increase the overall number of serotonin and dopamine neurotransmitter molecules in the brain, they work by moving serotonin and dopamine molecules from one place to another in the brain and in the process deplete these neurotransmitters making the cause of the problem worse, "low levels of neurotransmitters". The effectiveness of these drugs in most OCD Treatment patients is low involving years of medical clinic office visits where very small gains in obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors being gleaned out of the visit. Few patients obtain complete and abrupt relief of symptoms seen using the NeuroResearch Clinics Approach. The natural nutrient approach of NeuroResearch Clinics with neurotransmitter testing as indicated, in most patients, leads to results similar to turning off a light switch turning off, the obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors abruptly stop when the proper balance of neurotransmitters is achieved.

 It is no secret NeuroResearch Clinics uses the nutrients 5-HTP, tyrosine, levodopa, and cysteine with neurotransmitter testing as indicated to treat OCD patients in order to achieve the results that are documented by our doctors, Proper use of these simple nutrients in medical treatment is not simple. From time to time a patient will say, "Why do I want to take that, I can go to a health food store and buy it?" People off the street buying in a health food store is like going to an art store and buying a bunch of oil paints then going home and expecting to paint like a mater artist even though there was no previous painting experience. Due to their unique chemical properties nutrients have tremendous potential. The potential is only fully realized in the hands of the fully trained professional using neurotransmitter testing. Treatment is not just giving a nutrient pill, it is the whole medical approach doctors are trained in to manage the disease properly and make sure that that the treatment plan is on track to get symptoms under control.

The Peer Reviewed Research of NeuroResearch Clinics

  The research findings of NeuroResearch Clinics have not been ignored. The University of Minnesota Medical School is writing a series of papers on the neurotransmitter testing research of NeuroResearch Clinics. The first of a series of papers by University of Minnesota Medical School based on the neurotransmitter testing research of NeuroResearch was published in "NeuroPsychiatric Disease and Treatment" May 1, 2009. Ingrid Kohlstadt, MD of Johns Hopkins in her new medical text book released February 7, 2009 included a chapter on depression written by Marty L. Hinz, MD  President Clinical Research NeuroResearch Clinics outlining in depth the proper use of amino acids and neurotransmitter testing in treatment of depression.

University of Minnesota Medical School neurotransmitter testing paper on the research of NeuroResearch Clinics.

 

The medical text book chapter on depression written by Marty L. Hinz, MD-Ingrid Kohlstadt, MD editor-Johns Hopkins released February, 7, 2009

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