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Lipidomics: The Function of Vital Lipids in Embryogenesis Preventing Autism Spectrum Disorders, Treating Sterile Inflammatory Diatheses with a Lymphopoietic Central Nervous System Component
Author(s) -
Thomas Tallberg,
Jan Dabek,
Raija Hallamaa,
Faik Atroshi
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of lipids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-3030
pISSN - 2090-3049
DOI - 10.1155/2011/137175
Subject(s) - medicine , lipidomics , central nervous system , autism , bioinformatics , broad spectrum , physiology , neuroscience , biology , psychiatry , chemistry , combinatorial chemistry
The central role performed by billions of vital central nervous system (CNS) lipids “lipidomics” in medical physiology is usually overlooked. A metabolic deficiency embracing these vital lipids can form the aetiology for a variety of diseases. CNS lipids regulate embryogenesis, cell induction, mental balance by preventing autism spectrum disorders, depression, burn-out syndromes like posttraumatic stress disease PTSD, by guarding normal immunity, treating sterile inflammatory diatheses with a titanium containing lymphopoietic CNS lipid component. The propaganda driving for unphysiological fat-free diets is dangerous and can cause serious health problems for a whole generation. This article presents a broad list of various mental and motor bodily functions of which the healthy function depends on these vital CNS lipids. A rigorous fat-free diet can provoke these metabolic lipid deficiencies but they can fortunately be compensated by dietary supplementation, but not by pharmacologic treatment.

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