List of Archives

Back To Archive Home Page


The Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine Vol. 14, 1st Quarter 1999

ABSTRACT

The Adrenochrome Hypothesis and Psychiatry (1990)

A. HOFFER, M.D. Ph.D.; H. OSMOND, M.D.

Download The Full Text Article in (PDF)

Back to 1999 1st Quarter Table of Contents

Back to 1999 archives

Subscribe to the JOM


The adrenochrome hypothesis of schizophrenia (Hofl'er, Osmond and Smythies, 1954), was simulated by the work of Osmond and Sinythies (1952) which focused on methylated derivatives of adrenalin as possible endogenous schizophrenogens. They showed that the experience which followed the ingestion of mescaline was in many ways similar to the experience induced in normal people by schizophrenia. This drew attention to derivatives of adrenalin (and of all the sympathomimetic amines and their precursors) as etiological factors. However, in 1952 very fiew of these compounds had been studied.

With our resources we were forced to limit our studies to one derivative, adrenochrome, an oxidized, coloured derivative of adrenalin. So little was known about its chemistry it was not: surprising chemists had concluded, incorrectly, it was inherently unstable and difficult to study. We allocated much of our chemical researches to this interesting substance. As a result, under the direction of Dr. R. Heacock (1959, 1965), an enormous body of data was gathered and published detailing the chemistry of adrenochrome, its synthesis, metabolism, conversion to other products and its reactions with substances like ascorbic acid.


[Home] [History] [Library] [Nutrients] [Resources] [Contact] [Contribute]
Back To Molecule

This website is managed by Riordan Clinic
A Non-profit 501(c)(3) Medical, Research and Educational Organization
3100 North Hillside Avenue, Wichita, KS 67219 USA
Phone: 316-682-3100; Fax: 316-682-5054
© (Riordan Clinic) 2004 - 2024c

Information on Orthomolecular.org is provided for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical advice.
Consult your orthomolecular health care professional for individual guidance on specific health problems.