Orthomolecular medicine uses vitamins,
minerals, and amino
acids to create optimum nutritional content and
balance in the body, and, thus, targets a wide range of
conditions, including depression, hypertension, schizophrenia,
cancer, and other mental and physiological disorders.
In 1968, Nobel Prize - winner Linus Pauling, Ph.D.,
originated the term "orthomolecular" to describe an
approach to medicine that uses naturally occurring substances
normally present in the body. "Ortho" means correct or
normal, and orthomolecular physicians recognize that in many cases
of physiological and psychological disorders health can be
reestablished by properly correcting, or normalizing, the balance of
vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and other similar substances within
the body.
Explaining a basic
principle of orthomolecular medicine, Jonathan Wright, M.D., of Kent, Washington, says
that our physical bodies are made up of water,
fat, protein, carbohydrates, and similar substances. Therefore, it's logical
to expect that if something is wrong with our bodies, proper
manipulation of the elements of which they are made will be a major
factor in reestablishing health.
Vitamins and minerals were first used to treat illnesses
unrelated to nutrient deficiency in the 1920s. During that time, it was
discovered that vitamin A could prevent childhood deaths from
infectious illness, and that heart arrhythmia (irregular heartbeat)
could be stopped by dosages of magnesium. Scientific evidence
supporting nutritional therapy did not fully emerge, however, until
the 1950s, when Abram Hoffer, M.D., and Humphrey Osmond, M.D., began
treating schizophrenics with high doses of vitamin B3
(niacin). Their studies showed that niacin, in combination with
standard medical therapy, doubled the number of recoveries in a
one-year period.
As research continued it was found that
malnutrition and improper nutrition could place a person at risk,
directly causing or contributing to the development of disease and
psychiatric disorders. Furthermore, it was noted that health can be
impaired, due, in part, to the consumption of refined, empty-calorie
foods such as white bread and pastries and the overconsumption of
sugar. Decreased intake of dietary fiber, bran, minerals, and
complex carbohydrates were also found in patients with certain forms
of mental illness, along with a loss of vitamins and an increase in
dietary fat. At the time, the notion that diet could contribute to
disease was a new and controversial idea.