Abstract
Recently certain hypotheses with a biochemical flavour have been proposed to explain the etiology of psychosis. These hypotheses suggest that a disturbance in the metabolism of some important substance such as serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine), nor-adrenaline or adrenaline results in a chemical imbalance in the brain, or leads to the formation of an abnormal product which is toxic to the brain, although not completely interfering with its metabolic activities; and, further, that this disturbance is causative in psychoses.
In this paper the various hypotheses are described and evaluated. For example, the metabolic disturbance has been attributed to (1) excessive accumulation of serotonin in the brain, (2) a deficiency of it in that organ, or (3) excessive conversion to bufotenine, its dimethyl derivative. “Adrenaline theories” postulate the conversion of (1) nor-adrenaline to a mescaline-like substance, or (2) adrenaline to adrenolutine, adrenochrome or “adrenoxine”, the conversion product playing the role of the toxic, psychosis-producing agent.
The limited and contradictory evidence available to these hypotheses is pointed out, as well as the frankly speculative nature of some of the views. A brief indication is made of the considerable biochemical research on the function of serotonin and catecholamines in the brain, research which is going on in many laboratories quite apart from the described hypotheses. The importance of such research for neuropsychiatry is emphasized.
