Ichneumonwasp...it's easy to say...'that's impossible'...or 'it doesn't relate' or 'that's all it does', etc. and for the most part, such responses are influenced by what is known without taking into account things not yet known...or perhaps known, but yet to be applied to what is already known...and sometimes what we think we already know turns out to be very different. Like when scientists all thought it was impossible for brain cells to regenerate. Finally, there's credible enough evidence to support it. Somebody found it. In your position as a teacher, you are obligated to keep to what is already known and will communicate such. But in relaxed conversation as this is, keep an open mind, because what science does know can change if something is found to be relevant to change the definitions into what we do know.
As of the thoughts into the pineal gland and its possible relation to the thalami is direct, but without a direct physical attachment or even hormonal. I think information between the two are relative to communications between nerve cells…the synaptic gap…a space between where components like neurotransmitters do their jobs…and the pineal gland secretes its hormones according to the information it receives. We do know that the retina translates to the pineal, yes? I can see this being a translation of the light our eyes take in…light into retina…retina communicates this to the pineal. But, what about when the eyes are closed and there is no light coming in? This is where I think heat sensory takes over, when light to the retina is absent producing the same outputs through eyesight using heat sources.
Interestingly, hallucinations are common when our body temperature rises to a feverish degree.
About pinoline...
Pinoline gives suspicions into actual eyesight...the chemical component to eyesight. That's a hypothesis I have. I don't know if anyone else has the same suspicions. I'd like to meet them. The closest research I came across about pinoline found it in the retina and this is where cones and rods are. With pinoline in the immediate vicinity of cones and rods, gives a good possibility for interaction between these things...much more if pinoline weren't found in the retina. Eyesight itself is still a mysterious function. There are missing pieces of information about eyesight and how it works. We know the mechanics quite well and how they work, but as of how they are influenced, we only know a little. Scientists do know there are things still unknown about eyesight. It would be closed minded to say the pineal gland has nothing to do with eyesight and thus nothing to do with the hallucinations seen during sleep paralysis.
That studies about pinoline in the retina can be found here…http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez, but these studies are about something else. When I found these articles, they strengthened my suspicions about the pineal gland having any influence to vision.
We also know that hormones are rarely a single influence by themselves, but often work in conjunction with other substances. Biological systems work with very small individual systems working together and different sets reactions with these different substances will have different influences. It is very possible pinoline plays as an influence with melatonin in influence to the rate of metabolism where melatonin by itself may not.
I just find it too coincidental we get sleepy when our metabolism slows down and it always happens when melatonin secretions increase and when metabolism speeds up, we are more awake and on the go and it always happens when melatonin levels go down. Pinoline may be that tie.
I remember asking my grandmother’s sleep doctor what the medication he prescribed her was based on and I was specific in my question if Cylert was based on the pineal gland’s secretion of pinoline and he answered yes. This is what he prescribed to my grandmother to keep her awake and helped prevent cataplexy seizures. This is where I get the connection between being awake and pinoline from the pineal gland. Cylert was originally targeted to treat ADD and ADHD, but sleep experts found another use for it with narcoleptics. This was why there was such uproar from narcoleptics when the FDA stopped the production of Cylert, citing it put too much stress on the liver and there were other, less damaging sources to treat ADD and ADHD. Narcoleptics with cataplexy were also prescribed this drug and it worked. They were left out in the equation completely in the FDA’s decision.
About the cerebellum, quadregimena and the pineal gland...even pictures of real brains show these organs as though they were one system attached to the rest of the brain by nerves and the pineal gland reaches up to the thalami, which brings this post full circle with the thalami possibly influencing the pineal gland.
As of connections to sleep paralysis…there are different categories for different types of sleep paralysis. The sleep paralysis I get is the more rare type which includes going into REM sleep from wakefulness and coming out of REM sleep and includes extended paralysis…the paralysis extends beyond just skeletal muscles, but also involves non skeletal muscles. Visions are apparent in every incident. There is obviously a different influence here than what people know of the norm. This seems to be when the hallucinations are more profound…more than a sense of a shadow; more than the sense of an evil presence. I’ve spoken to people with mild forms of sleep paralysis and their paralysis is limited to their skeletal muscles. Their eyes are open and they can move their eyes to look around the room. They can also breathe freely without feeling heavy chested. They don’t get the shakiness that seems quite evident in most incidences of the more extreme cases. Their experiences also seem limited to coming out of REM sleep rather than it happening going into REM sleep. Timing of the incident may be everything. Who yet really knows? These milder forms of sleep paralysis may be taking place later in the process between sleep and wake, when inner type visual activity we know as dreams stop, while the more profound types may happen earlier in the process…allowing the visual activity to extend reactions with impulses as the individual begins to slip out of REM sleep…rather than when the process is almost complete.
These more extreme forms of sleep paralysis may involve the very things you claim do not involve the norm of sleep paralysis. They are different and very well may have different influences.
As of the thoughts into the pineal gland and its possible relation to the thalami is direct, but without a direct physical attachment or even hormonal. I think information between the two are relative to communications between nerve cells…the synaptic gap…a space between where components like neurotransmitters do their jobs…and the pineal gland secretes its hormones according to the information it receives. We do know that the retina translates to the pineal, yes? I can see this being a translation of the light our eyes take in…light into retina…retina communicates this to the pineal. But, what about when the eyes are closed and there is no light coming in? This is where I think heat sensory takes over, when light to the retina is absent producing the same outputs through eyesight using heat sources.
Interestingly, hallucinations are common when our body temperature rises to a feverish degree.
About pinoline...
Pinoline gives suspicions into actual eyesight...the chemical component to eyesight. That's a hypothesis I have. I don't know if anyone else has the same suspicions. I'd like to meet them. The closest research I came across about pinoline found it in the retina and this is where cones and rods are. With pinoline in the immediate vicinity of cones and rods, gives a good possibility for interaction between these things...much more if pinoline weren't found in the retina. Eyesight itself is still a mysterious function. There are missing pieces of information about eyesight and how it works. We know the mechanics quite well and how they work, but as of how they are influenced, we only know a little. Scientists do know there are things still unknown about eyesight. It would be closed minded to say the pineal gland has nothing to do with eyesight and thus nothing to do with the hallucinations seen during sleep paralysis.
That studies about pinoline in the retina can be found here…http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez, but these studies are about something else. When I found these articles, they strengthened my suspicions about the pineal gland having any influence to vision.
We also know that hormones are rarely a single influence by themselves, but often work in conjunction with other substances. Biological systems work with very small individual systems working together and different sets reactions with these different substances will have different influences. It is very possible pinoline plays as an influence with melatonin in influence to the rate of metabolism where melatonin by itself may not.
I just find it too coincidental we get sleepy when our metabolism slows down and it always happens when melatonin secretions increase and when metabolism speeds up, we are more awake and on the go and it always happens when melatonin levels go down. Pinoline may be that tie.
I remember asking my grandmother’s sleep doctor what the medication he prescribed her was based on and I was specific in my question if Cylert was based on the pineal gland’s secretion of pinoline and he answered yes. This is what he prescribed to my grandmother to keep her awake and helped prevent cataplexy seizures. This is where I get the connection between being awake and pinoline from the pineal gland. Cylert was originally targeted to treat ADD and ADHD, but sleep experts found another use for it with narcoleptics. This was why there was such uproar from narcoleptics when the FDA stopped the production of Cylert, citing it put too much stress on the liver and there were other, less damaging sources to treat ADD and ADHD. Narcoleptics with cataplexy were also prescribed this drug and it worked. They were left out in the equation completely in the FDA’s decision.
About the cerebellum, quadregimena and the pineal gland...even pictures of real brains show these organs as though they were one system attached to the rest of the brain by nerves and the pineal gland reaches up to the thalami, which brings this post full circle with the thalami possibly influencing the pineal gland.
As of connections to sleep paralysis…there are different categories for different types of sleep paralysis. The sleep paralysis I get is the more rare type which includes going into REM sleep from wakefulness and coming out of REM sleep and includes extended paralysis…the paralysis extends beyond just skeletal muscles, but also involves non skeletal muscles. Visions are apparent in every incident. There is obviously a different influence here than what people know of the norm. This seems to be when the hallucinations are more profound…more than a sense of a shadow; more than the sense of an evil presence. I’ve spoken to people with mild forms of sleep paralysis and their paralysis is limited to their skeletal muscles. Their eyes are open and they can move their eyes to look around the room. They can also breathe freely without feeling heavy chested. They don’t get the shakiness that seems quite evident in most incidences of the more extreme cases. Their experiences also seem limited to coming out of REM sleep rather than it happening going into REM sleep. Timing of the incident may be everything. Who yet really knows? These milder forms of sleep paralysis may be taking place later in the process between sleep and wake, when inner type visual activity we know as dreams stop, while the more profound types may happen earlier in the process…allowing the visual activity to extend reactions with impulses as the individual begins to slip out of REM sleep…rather than when the process is almost complete.
These more extreme forms of sleep paralysis may involve the very things you claim do not involve the norm of sleep paralysis. They are different and very well may have different influences.
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