Submitted by Actual-Pumpkin1567 t3_zxsbm7 in askscience
AxelBoldt t1_j294iox wrote
Reply to comment by 86BillionFireflies in In Parkinson disease, why doesn't the adrenal gland fill the dopamine deficiency? by Actual-Pumpkin1567
Thank you for that. Do the dopamine-releasing neurons take up L-dopa, turn it into dopamine, and then release it at the synapse?
86BillionFireflies t1_j29xtcv wrote
That's exactly right! In the synthesis of dopamine, converting tyrosine to L-DOPA is the slowest step, so having extra L-DOPA available significantly increases dopamine production.
AxelBoldt t1_j2ack46 wrote
And we're not concerned that, with L-dopa treatment, some dopamine-releasing neurons that aren't affected by Parkinson's will now release too much dopamine? I would be afraid of schizophrenia for example.
86BillionFireflies t1_j2b1pvx wrote
That's what side effects are. Anytime you take psychoactive medications, they're going to mess with a thousand different brain systems that ALSO happen to use the neurotransmitter(s) affected by the drug, but were functioning normally. Thankfully, the brain is usually pretty good at compensating for stuff like that (which is why drug tolerance is a thing). Otherwise, side effects would probably be a LOT worse in general.
But when you say you're worried about schizophrenia, that's still thinking about it wrong. Schizophrenia is not caused by a simple overabundance of dopamine, it's caused by some kind of complex disturbance in the activity of one or more networks of brain circuits. The fact that some of those circuits have some dopaminergic components, and that some of the drugs that can partially alleviate symptoms affect dopamine among other neurotransmitters does not make dopamine central to schizophrenia.
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