Volume 8 No 1 (2010)
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The Cell Membrane: Is It A Bridge From Psychiatry To Quantum Consciousness?
Lucio Tonello, Massimo Cocchi
Abstract
Many current mainstream neuropsychiatric models show inconsistencies, equivocal
evidence and failure to explain neuropsychiatric illness. Completely new
approaches could help greatly to improve the current situation. A very promising
pathway seems to be quantum models of mind, brain, and consciousness; however,
an open question is how to link them to the psychiatric world. Cytoskeletal proteins
have been credibly proposed as a starting point, but the cell membrane should be
taken into account as well. In fact, G‐protein dynamics and membrane fatty acid
profiles are deeply involved in classical mechanisms of psychiatric illness, and
additionally they may play a much different though important role within quantum
models of mind, brain, and consciousness. Indeed, G‐protein dynamics and
membrane fatty acid profiles may represent a substantial bridge between the
psychiatric world and quantum theories. Might the nexus of cell membrane
investigations therefore lead to a diagnostic tool able to identify psychopathology in
a way also comprehensible in terms of a patient’s altered conscious state? Toward
the end of answering this question, brain cell membranes should be studied, but
some experimental clues suggest that platelet membranes may ultimately provide
an alternative practical assay with the virtues of low cost and ease of accessibility.
In any case, cell membranes (i.e. G‐protein dynamics and/or fatty acid profiles)
show much promise as a starting point for the linkage of psychiatry to quantum
models of mind, brain, and consciousness.
Keywords
cell membrane, G‐protein, fatty acids, brain, platelet, quantum brain, quantum mind, quantum consciousness
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