THE
BLOOD-BRAIN BARRIER - http://www.oilhealer.com/bloodbrain.cfm
By David Stewart, Ph.D.,R.A.
It was thought for years that
the interstitial tissues of the brain served as a barrier to keep damaging
substances from reaching the neurons of the brain and the cerebrospinal fluid.
Instead of a barrier, it would be more accurate to consider it as a sieve or
filter through which only molecules of a certain size or smaller can pass.
Most of the molecules of the
substances used in chemotherapy are too large to pass through the blood-brain
filter, which is why doctors say that chemotherapy doesn't work on brain
cancer. Some of the smaller molecules get through, but not the whole suite of
drugs intended.
Doctors don't know for sure, but
it seems that in order to cross the blood-brain barrier, only molecules less
than 800-1000 atomic mass units (amu) in molecular weight can get through.
Lipid solubility seems to be another factor which facilitates passing through
the blood-brain barrier. Water soluble molecules don't usually penetrate into
brain tissue, even when very small. The molecules of essential oils are all not
only small, but lipid soluble as well.
In fact, when it comes to
essential oils, small molecules (less than 500 amu) are what they are made of.
That is why they are aromatic. The only way for something to be aromatic is for
the molecules to be so small that they readily leap into the air so they can
enter our noses and be detected as odor and smell.
That is why oils for cooking or
massage, such as corn, peanut, sesame seed, safflower, walnut, almond, canola,
olive and other oils pressed from seeds are not aromatic. Sure, they have a
smell, but you can't smell them across the room in minutes as one can when you
opens a bottle of peppermint, hyssop, or cinnamon oil. Essential oils of every
species cross the blood-brain barrier.
This makes them uniquely able to
address disease, not only from a physical level, but from a more basic and
fundamental level-that of the emotions which are often the root cause of physical
illness.
A QUICK COURSE IN
CHEMISTRY
Because of the tiny molecular structure of the components of an essential oil,
they are extremely concentrated. One drop contains approximately 40
million-trillion molecules. Numerically that is a 4 with 19 zeros after it:
40,000,000,000,000,000,000. We have 100 trillion cells in our bodies, and
that's a lot. But one drop of essential oil contains enough molecules to cover
every cell in our bodies with 40,000 molecules. Considering that it only takes
one molecule of the right kind to open a receptor site and communicate with the
DNA to alter cellular function, you can see why even inhaling a small amount of
oil vapor can have profound effects on the body, brain, and emotions. Sometimes
too many oil molecules overload the receptor sites, and they freeze up without
responding at all, when a smaller amount would have been just right. This is
why we say that when using oils, "sometimes less is better."
Sometimes more is better, too. Knowing the difference is the art of aromatherapy.
Essential oils are mixtures of
dozens, even hundreds, of constituents, all of which are composed of carbon and
hydrogen and sometimes oxygen. All essential oils are principally composed of a
class of organic compounds built of "isoprene units."
An isoprene unit is a set of
five connected carbon atoms with eight hydrogens attached. Their molecular
weight is only 68 amu, which is very small, indeed. Molecules built of isoprene
units are all classified as "terpenes." Terpenes are what make essential
oils unique in the world of natural substances.
PHENYLPROPANOIDS
Phenylpropanoids are compounds of carbon-ring molecules incorporating one
isoprene unit. They are also called hemiterpenes. There are dozens of varieties
of phenylpropanoids.
They are found in Clove (90%), Cassia (80%), Basil (75%), Cinnamon (73%),
Oregano (60%), Anise (50%), Peppermint (25%). While they can create conditions
where unfriendly viruses and bacteria cannot live, the most important function
performed byphenylpropanoids is that they clean the receptor sites on the cells.
Without clean receptor sites, cells cannot communicate, and the body
malfunctions, resulting in sickness.
MONOTERPENES
Monoterpenes are compounds of two isoprene units, which is ten carbon atoms and
sixteen hydrogen atoms per molecule- molecular weight 136 amu. There are an
estimated 2,000 varieties of monoterpenes.
Monoterpenes are found in most
essential oils: Galbanum (80%), Angelica (73%), Hyssop ((70%), Rose of Sharon
(54%), Peppermint (45%), Juniper (42%), Frankincense (40%), Spruce (38%), Pine
(30%), Cypress (28%), and Myrtle (25%).
While offering a variety of healing properties, the most important ability of
the monoterpenes is that they canreprogram miswritten information in the
cellular memory. With improper coding in the DNA, cells malfunction and
diseases result, including lethal ones such as cancer.
SESQUITERPENES
Sesquiterpenes are compounds of three isoprene units, which is fifteen carbons
and twenty-four hydrogens per molecule- molecular weight 204 amu. There are
more than 10,000 kinds of sesquiterpenes. Sesquiterpenes are the principal
constituents of Cedarwood (98%), Vetiver (97%), Spikenard (93%), Sandalwood
(Aloes) 90%, Black Pepper (74%), Patchouli (71%), Myrrh (62%), and Ginger
(59%). They are also found in Galbanum, Onycha, and Frankincense (8%).
Sesquiterpene molecules deliver
oxygen molecules to cells, like hemoglobin does in the blood. Sesquiterpenes
can also erase or deprogram miswritten codes in the DNA. Sesquiterpenes are thought
to be especially effective in fighting cancer because the root problem with a
cancer cell is that it contains misinformation, and sesquiterpenes can erase that
garbled information. At the same time the oxygen carried by sesquiterpene
molecules creates an environment where cancer cells can't reproduce. Hence,
sesquiterpenes deliver cancer cells a double punch-onethat disables their coded
misbehavior and a second that stops their growth.
The American Medical Association (AMA) has said that if they could find an
agent that would pass the blood-brain barrier, they would be able to find cures
for ailments such as Lou Gehrig's disease, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's
disease, and Parkinson's disease. Such agents already exist and have been
available since Biblical times. The agents, of course, are essential oils-particularly
those containing the brain oxygenating molecules of sesquiterpenes.
THE TRIPLE WHAMMY
The big triple punch combination of "PMS" (Phenylpropanoids,
Monoterpenes, and Sesquiterpenes) found in essential oils is very powerful in
addressing many illnesses, injuries, and disease conditions. That is because
this combination offers the following:
First, you clean the receptor
sites allowing the proper transfer of hormones, peptides, neurotransmitters, steroids,
and other intracellular messengers. (The Phenylpropanoids do that.)
Second, you deprogram or erase
the wrong information from cellular memory stored in the DNA. (The
Sesquiterpenes take care of that.)
Third, you reprogram the cells
with the correct information so they can function properly. (The Monoterpenes
do this.)
These three classes of chemical
components are why essential oils can sometimes affect a healing that is nearly
instant and also permanent. What they simply do is to restore the body back to
its natural state of balance and health. While a specific oil may have one or
two of these three classes of compounds as its predominant chemistry, all the
Biblical oils contain some of all of them. This is one secret to their amazing
healing abilities.
So there you have it in a
nutshell: The way the blood-brain barrier works and the biochemistry of one of
the ways essential oils can help achieve a healing.