InteractionsGuide Index Page
Analysis Search Terms:
Tryptophan
Nutrient Name: Tryptophan.
Synonyms: 1-Alpha-amino-3-indolepropionic acid, indole-alpha-aminopropionic acid,
Chemistry and Form
Levotryptophan,
Physiology and Function
Tryptophan is one of eight essential amino acids that must be obtained from the diet. Its primary functions include its role in niacin synthesis and as a precursor to both serotonin and melatonin. Approximately 98% of dietary
Melatonin ( N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine) is derived from serotonin within the pineal gland and the retina, where the necessary N-acetyltransferase enzyme is found.
Known or Potential Therapeutic Uses
Anodyne, antidepressant, antihyperglycemic, antihypertensive, galactagogue, melatonin precursor, niacin precursor, sedative, serotonin precursor.
Possible Uses
Agalactia, anorexia, bulimia, appetite suppression, bipolar disorder, carcinoid syndrome, dementia, depression, fibromyalgia, Hartnup's disease, hypertension, insomnia, mania, menopausal symptoms, migraine headaches, obesity, pain syndromes, parkinsonism, phenylketonuria, psychosis, premenstrual syndrome, schizophrenia, serotonin deficiency syndrome.
Deficiency Symptoms
A deficiency of tryptophan may lead to depression, edema, hair depigmentation, insomnia, lethargy, liver damage, muscle loss, pellagra, slowed growth in children, and suicidal thoughts. Metabolic disturbances associated with tryptophan deficiencies are carcinoid syndrome and Hartnup's disease. Symptoms of serotonin deficiency syndrome (SDS) include nervousness, anxiety, sleep disorders, mood disorders, and excessive appetite.
Dietary Sources
Tryptophan is the least abundant amino acid in foods. It tends to be deficient in most dietary proteins and has an uneven distribution. The richest dietary sources include fish, meat, dairy, eggs, nuts, and wheat germ. The seeds of evening primrose are a particularly rich plant source of tryptophan. There is lingering controversy as to the degree to which dietary levels of tryptophan intake affect serotonin and melatonin levels.
Dosage Forms Available
Capsule.
Source Materials for Nutrient Preparations
Synthetic
Dosage Range
Adult
- Dietary: Minimum daily requirements are estimated as 0.25 g for males and 0.15 g for females.
- Average U.S. daily intake: 1.0 to 1.5 g.
- Recommended dietary allowance (RDA): 200 mg per day.
- Supplemental/Maintenance: Supplementation usually not necessary.
- Pharmacologic/Therapeutic: 0.5 to 4.0 g per day, short-term use. Occasionally, doses of 8 to 12 g daily, given in three or four equally divided doses, are used in the treatment of depression.
When
Toxic: 7 g per 150 lb body weight.
Overview
Nutrient Adverse Effects
General Adverse Effects
Anorexia, dizziness, drowsiness, dry mouth, headache, nausea, sexual disinhibition.
Long-term supplementation or treatment with tryptophan may increase plasma levels of other amino acids, potentially resulting in various adverse effects.
Adults
Studies in humans have shown that 100 mg/kg/day of tryptophan, corresponding to 7 g/150 lb, can cause gastric irritation, vomiting, and head twitching. A dosage of 800 mg/kg given to rhesus monkeys did not produce detectable clinical adverse effects.
Although tryptophan is a naturally occurring substance in the body, controversies surround serious adverse reactions to reported contaminants in both
Special Issues
During 1989, 35 deaths and many cases of severe allergic reaction, in the form of the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome characterized by high eosinophil counts, scleroderma-like muscle pain, and thickening of the skin, were associated with consumption of tryptophan supplements. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) removed
As a serotonin precursor,
Mutagenicity
Animal tests involving oral or subcutaneous administration of
Life Stage
Inadequate research-based evidence exists to demonstrate any particular age-related effects on pediatric or geriatric populations as a result of increased tryptophan intake.
Pregnancy and Nursing
Well-designed controlled clinical trials with human subjects have not been undertaken, nor have case reports been qualified and systematically analyzed, regarding effects of
Laboratory Values
Tryptophan levels in the blood vary greatly when measured by different laboratories. Tryptophan can be measured by fluorometric and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) techniques. Some experts believe chromatography may be the most accurate. Other, indirect methods can also be employed, such as the tryptophan load test. This test involves measuring a metabolite of tryptophan, xanthurenic acid, in the urine after a standard 2-g dose is given. The more xanthurenic acid found in the urine, the greater is the need for either vitamin B
Contraindications
Achlorhydria, bladder cancer, cataracts, diabetes mellitus, female infertility, pregnancy, psoriasis; sensitivity to
Precautions and Warnings
Strategic Considerations
The therapeutic effects of
Serotonin syndrome carries potentially serious clinical consequences and is characterized by the triad of altered mental status, autonomic dysfunction, and neuromuscular abnormalities. The serotonin syndrome is similar to the neuroleptic malignant syndrome and is usually differentiated by the setting of recent addition of a serotonergic agent. Specific symptoms can include agitation, anxiety, ataxia, confusion, delirium, diaphoresis, diarrhea, fever, hyperreflexia, myoclonus, incoordination, shivering, nausea, vomiting, or tremor. This phenomenon most often occurs in the presence of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors, opioids, and other serotonergic agents, when the serotonin system has been modulated by another serotonergic agent or compromised by illness. SSRIs, particularly fluoxetine, are most frequently involved in reported instances of drug interactions inducing serotonin syndrome; as a consequence of their long elimination half-life (1 week for fluoxetine), the risk of interactions persists for several days or even weeks after SSRI withdrawal.
Many clinicians and some researchers have investigated potential synergistic benefits from coadministration of tryptophan and various psychoactive pharmaceutical agents. Although the consequences of adverse effects can be clinically significant, the available evidence suggests that such risk is less probable, and adverse effects less severe, with tryptophan than with 5-HTP. Caution is requisite to use of tryptophan, in any dose, during antidepressant or other medication therapy, and this warrants close supervision and regular monitoring within an integrative context. 5-HTP should never be combined with SSRIs or MAO inhibitors in any dose, except possibly in a carefully monitored inpatient clinical research setting.
- Evidence: Fluoxetine (Prozac, Sarafem).
- Extrapolated, based on similar properties: Citalopram (Celexa), duloxetine (Cymbalta), escitalopram (S-citalopram; Lexapro), fluvoxamine (Faurin, Luvox), paroxetine (Aropax, Deroxat, Paxil, Seroxat), sertraline (Zoloft), venlafaxine (Effexor).
Minimal to Mild Adverse Interaction—Vigilance Necessary | Bimodal or Variable Interaction, with Professional Management | Beneficial or Supportive Interaction, with Professional Management |
Probability: 1. Certain
Evidence Base: Emerging
Effect and Mechanism of Action
Research
In an early trial involving zimelidine for the treatment of depression, Walinder et al. 9 found that the administration of the relatively high dose of 45 mg per pound body weight of
Research into the relationship between tryptophan depletion and the therapeutic mechanisms and efficacy of SSRI medications provides useful data in understanding the tryptophan-SSRI interaction pattern. Short-term reduction in plasma tryptophan (tryptophan depletion) produces a relapse of depressive symptoms in 60% of previously depressed patients recently recovered with SSRI treatment. Barr et al. 10 investigated the hypothesis that SSRI treatment itself may confer vulnerability to the development of depressive symptoms during tryptophan depletion. They conducted a double-blind placebo-controlled involving six healthy individuals who underwent tryptophan depletion before and after 6 weeks of treatment with fluoxetine, 20 mg/day. Their findings showed no increased vulnerability to the mood-lowering effects of tryptophan depletion as a result of fluoxetine treatment. From these data the researchers determined that treatment with SSRIs alone does not produce the depressive effects of tryptophan depletion observed in SSRI-treated depressed and obsessive-compulsive disorder patients.
In a subsequent trial looking at the differential pathways of antidepressant action in desipramine and fluoxetine, Delgado et al. 11 studied 55 individuals diagnosed with, but not currently medicated for, depression who were randomly assigned to antidepressant treatment with either desipramine or fluoxetine, then administered amino acid drinks capable of inducing tryptophan depletion. Whereas eight (of 15) fluoxetine responders reported relapse of significant depressive symptoms, only one (of 15) of the desipramine responders and none of the control subjects relapsed. The researchers concluded that rapid depletion of plasma tryptophan transiently reverses the antidepressant response in many patients taking fluoxetine, but not desipramine, and that antidepressant response to fluoxetine appears to be significantly dependent on serotonin (5-HT) availability. An important finding of this study is that various SSRI antidepressants mediate their therapeutic effects through different mechanisms. Recent investigation by Porter et al. 12 into the connection between tryptophan availability and variable response to different antidepressant medications further demonstrates that patients with a tryptophan level below the mean improved significantly more than those with a higher level but with comparable serum steady-state drug levels.
Meltzer et al. 13 have found that fluoxetine potentiates the 5-HTP-mediated increase in plasma cortisol and prolactin secretion in subjects with major depression or with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
More directly, Levitan et al. 14 conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial that examined the antidepressant and hypnotic effects of combining tryptophan and fluoxetine. In this small, preliminary clinical study, 30 individuals diagnosed with major depressive disorder were treated with fluoxetine and either tryptophan or placebo for 8 weeks. The investigators concluded that “combining 20 mg of fluoxetine with 2 g of tryptophan daily at the outset of treatment for major depressive disorder appears to be a safe protocol that may have both a rapid antidepressant effect and a protective effect on slow-wave sleep.” The cumulative message of the assembled research strongly suggests that large-scale, well-designed clinical trials are warranted to confirm and clarify the emerging pattern indicated by the various findings.
No available report or trial evidence suggests an adverse interaction response when fluoxetine has been combined with a protein-rich diet containing significant levels of
Reports
Unsupervised coadministration of an SSRI agent with tryptophan carries a moderate risk for higher incidence of serotonin-associated unintended effects and adverse events. Specifically, reports have suggested that when taken in the form of a nutraceutical,
Clinical Implications and Adaptations
A review of the evidence suggests an emerging, but not yet coherent and articulate, consensus supporting the proposition that
Such an integrative therapeutic strategy warrants close supervision and regular monitoring within the context of coordinated care by health providers trained and experienced in both clinical nutrition and conventional pharmacology. However, the concomitant use of supplemental
All available evidence strongly indicates that tryptophan-related data cannot be extrapolated to a clinical opportunity for safely combining 5-HTP and SSRI medications, and that all warnings and contraindications are amplified.
- 1.Badawy AA, Evans M. The role of free serum tryptophan in the biphasic effect of acute ethanol administration on the concentrations of rat brain tryptophan, 5-hydroxytryptamine and 5-hydroxyindol-3-ylacetic acid. Biochem J 1976;160:315-324.View Abstract
- 2.Pinelli A, Trivulzio S, Malvezzi L, Zecca L. Potentiation of the analgesic effects of tryptophan by allopurinol in rats. Arzneimittelforschung 1991;41:809-811.View Abstract
- 3.Daya S, Nonaka KO, Buzzell GR, Reiter RJ. Heme precursor 5-aminolevulinic acid alters brain tryptophan and serotonin levels without changing pineal serotonin and melatonin concentrations. J Neurosci Res 1989;23:304-309.
- 4.Becking GC, Johnson WJ. The inhibition of tryptophan pyrrolase by allopurinol, an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase. Can J Biochem 1967;45:1667-1672.View Abstract
- 5.Haskovec L, Dostal T, Jirak R. The action of allopurinol as an inhibitor of liver tryptophan pyrrolase in depressions. Act Nerv Super (Praha) 1972;14:131-132.View Abstract
- 6.Green AR, Aronson JK, Curzon G, Woods HF. Metabolism of an oral tryptophan load. II. Effect of pretreatment with the putative tryptophan pyrrolase inhibitors nicotinamide or allopurinol. Br J Clin Pharmacol 1980;10:611-615.View Abstract
- 7.Stern SL, Mendels J. Drug combinations in the treatment of refractory depression: a review. J Clin Psychiatry 1981;42:368-373.View Abstract
- 8.Coassolo P, Briand C, Bourdeaux M, Sari JC. Microcalorimetric method to determine competitive binding: action of a psychotropic drug (dipotassium chlorazepate) on l-tryptophan–human serum albumin complex. Biochim Biophys Acta 1978;538:512-520.View Abstract
- 9.Walinder J, Carlsson A, Persson R. 5-HT reuptake inhibitors plus tryptophan in endogenous depression. Acta Psychiatr Scand Suppl 1981;290:179-190.View Abstract
- 10.Barr LC, Heninger GR, Goodman W et al. Effects of fluoxetine administration on mood response to tryptophan depletion in healthy subjects. Biol Psychiatry 1997;41:949-954.View Abstract
- 11.Delgado PL, Miller HL, Salomon RM et al. Tryptophan-depletion challenge in depressed patients treated with desipramine or fluoxetine: implications for the role of serotonin in the mechanism of antidepressant action. Biol Psychiatry 1999;46:212-220.View Abstract
- 12.Porter RJ, Mulder RT, Joyce PR. Baseline prolactin and l-tryptophan availability predict response to antidepressant treatment in major depression. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 2003;165:216-221.View Abstract
- 13.Meltzer H, Bastani B, Jayathilake K, Maes M. Fluoxetine, but not tricyclic antidepressants, potentiates the 5-hydroxytryptophan-mediated increase in plasma cortisol and prolactin secretion in subjects with major depression or with obsessive compulsive disorder. Neuropsychopharmacology 1997;17:1-11.View Abstract
- 14.Levitan RD, Shen JH, Jindal R et al. Preliminary randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial of tryptophan combined with fluoxetine to treat major depressive disorder: antidepressant and hypnotic effects. J Psychiatry Neurosci 2000;25:337-346.View Abstract
- 15.Mitchell PB. Drug interactions of clinical significance with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. Drug Saf 1997;17:390-406.View Abstract
- 16.Central nervous system drugs, antidepressants, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. In: Threlkeld DS, ed. Facts and Comparisons Drug Information. St Louis: Facts and Comparisons; April 1997.
- 17.Van der Mast RC, Fekkes D. Serotonin and amino acids: partners in delirium pathophysiology? Semin Clin Neuropsychiatry 2000;5:125-131.
- 18.Steiner W, Fontaine R. Toxic reaction following the combined administration of fluoxetine and l-tryptophan: five case reports. Biol Psychiatry 1986;21:1067-1071.View Abstract
- 19.Carroll BJ. Prediction of treatment outcome with lithium. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1979;36:870-878.View Abstract
- 20.Maj M, Pirozzi R, Starace F. Previous pattern of course of the illness as a predictor of response to lithium prophylaxis in bipolar patients. J Affect Disord 1989;17:237-241.View Abstract
- 21.Rujescu D, Giegling I, Bondy B et al. Association of anger-related traits with SNPs in the TPH gene. Mol Psychiatry 2002;7:1023-1029.View Abstract
- 22.Kato T, Inubushi T, Kato N. Prediction of lithium response by 31P-MRS in bipolar disorder. Int J Neuropsychopharmacol 2000;3:83-85.View Abstract
- 23.Serretti A, Lilli R, Smeraldi E. Pharmacogenetics in affective disorders. Eur J Pharmacol 2002;438:117-128.View Abstract
- 24.Serretti A, Artioli P. Predicting response to lithium in mood disorders: role of genetic polymorphisms. Am J Pharmacogenomics 2003;3:17-30.View Abstract
- 25.Chotai J, Serretti A, Lattuada E et al. Gene-environment interaction in psychiatric disorders as indicated by season of birth variations in tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH), serotonin transporter (5-HTTLPR) and dopamine receptor (DRD4) gene polymorphisms. Psychiatry Res 2003;119:99-111.View Abstract
- 26.Serretti A, Lilli R, Lorenzi C et al. Tryptophan hydroxylase gene and response to lithium prophylaxis in mood disorders. J Psychiatr Res 1999;33:371-377.View Abstract
- 27.Serretti A. Lithium long-term treatment in mood disorders: clinical and genetic predictors. Pharmacogenomics 2002;3:117-129.View Abstract
- 28.Brewerton TD, Reus VI. Lithium carbonate and l-tryptophan in the treatment of bipolar and schizoaffective disorders. Am J Psychiatry 1983;140:757-760.View Abstract
- 29.Levy AB, Bucher P, Votolato N. Myoclonus, hyperreflexia and diaphoresis in patients on phenelzine-tryptophan combination treatment. Can J Psychiatry 1985;30:434-436.View Abstract
- 30.Thomas JM, Rubin EH. Case report of a toxic reaction from a combination of tryptophan and phenelzine. Am J Psychiatry 1984;141:281-283.View Abstract
- 31.Pope HG, Jr., Jonas JM, Hudson JI, Kafka MP. Toxic reactions to the combination of monoamine oxidase inhibitors and tryptophan. Am J Psychiatry 1985;142:491-492.
- 32.Goff DC. Two cases of hypomania following the addition of l-tryptophan to a monoamine oxidase inhibitor. Am J Psychiatry 1985;142:1487-1488.View Abstract
- 33.Alvine G, Black DW, Tsuang D. Case of delirium secondary to phenelzine/l-tryptophan combination. J Clin Psychiatry 1990;51:311.View Abstract
- 34.Sifton DW et al. Physicians’ Desk Reference. Montvale, NJ: Medical Economics Company; 2000:1509-1513.
- 35.Product Information: Meridia. Mount Olive, NJ: Knoll Pharmaceutical Company; 1999.
- 36.Chouinard G, Young SN, Annable L, Sourkes TL. Tryptophan-nicotinamide, imipramine and their combination in depression: a controlled study. Acta Psychiatr Scand 1979;59:395-414.View Abstract
- 37.Shaw DM, Macsweeney DA, Hewland R, Johnson AL. Tricyclic antidepressants and tryptophan in unipolar depression. Psychol Med 1975;5:276-278.View Abstract
- 38.Walinder J, Skott A, Carlsson A et al. Potentiation of the antidepressant action of clomipramine by tryptophan. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1976;33:1384-1389.View Abstract
- .[No authors listed.] Lithium increases serotonin release and decreases metabolism: implications for theories of schizophrenia. Science 1979;205(9).
- .[No authors listed.] Product information: Alti-Tryptophan, L-tryptophan. Mississauga, Ontario: AltiMed Pharmaceutical Company; 1999.
- .Adachi J, Ueno Y, Tatsuno Y, et al. A comparative study of tissue distribution and excretion among three substances implicated in eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. Adv Exp Med Biol 1996;398:365-370.
- .Adachi J, Gomez M, Smith CC, et al. Accumulation of 3-(phenylamino)alanine, a constituent in L-tryptophan products implicated in eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome, in blood and organs of the Lewis rats. Arch Toxicol 1995;69(4):266-270.
- .Agarwal DP, Ziemsen B, Goedde HW, et al. Free and bound plasma tryptophan levels in psychiatric disorders. In: Schlossberger HG, Kochen W, Linzen B, et al, eds. Progress in tryptophan and serotonin research. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter; 1984;391-396.
- .Allegri G, Angi MR, Costa C, et al. Tryptophan and kynurenine in senile cataract. In: Schlossberger HG, Kochen W, Linzen B, et al, eds. Progress in tryptophan and serotonin research. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter; 1984;469-472.
- .Bell C, Forshall S, Adrover M, et al. Does 5-HT restrain panic? A tryptophan depletion study in panic disorder patients recovered on paroxetine. J Psychopharmacol 2002;16(1):5-14.
- .Belongia EA, Hedberg CW, Gleich GJ, et al. An investigation of the cause of the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome associated with tryptophan use. N Engl J Med 1990;323:357-365.
- .Brenneman DE, Page SW, Schultzberg M, et al. A decomposition product of a contaminant implicated in L-tryptophan eosinophilia myalgia syndrome affects spinal cord neuronal cell death and survival through stereospecific, maturation and partly interleukin-1-dependent mechanisms. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 1993;266(2):1029-1035.
- .Bunce GE, Hess, JL, Davis D. Cataract formation following limited amino acid intake during gestation and lactation. Soc Exp Biol Med 1984;176:485-489.
- .Calandra C, Zappala E, Bonomo V, et al. [5-hydroxytryptophan in combination with allopurinol in depressions.] Minerva Psichiatr 1981;22(3):131-135. [Italian]
- .Castot A, Bidault I, Bournerias I, et al. [“Eosinophilia-myalgia” syndrome due to L-tryptophan containing products: cooperative evaluation of French Regional Centers of Pharmacovigilance: analysis of 24 cases.] Therapie 1991;46(5):355-365. [French]
- .Chan BS, Graudins A, Whyte IM, et al. Serotonin syndrome resulting from drug interactions. Med J Aust 1998;169(10):523-525.
- .Chotai J, Serretti A, Lattuada E, et al. Gene-environment interaction in psychiatric disorders as indicated by season of birth variations in tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH), serotonin transporter (5-HTTLPR) and dopamine receptor (DRD4) gene polymorphisms. Psychiatry Res 2003;119(1-2):99-111.
- .Coplan JD, Gorman JM. Detectable levels of fluoxetine metabolites after discontinuation: an unexpected serotonin syndrome. Am J Psychiatry 1993;150:837.
- .Deloukas P, Bentley D. The HapMap project and its application to genetic studies of drug response. Pharmacogenomics J 2004;4(2):88-90.
- .den Boer JA, Westenberg HG. Behavioral, neuroendocrine, and biochemical effects of 5-hydroxytryptophan administration in panic disorder. Psychiatry Res 1990;31(3):267-278.
- .Fernstrom JD, Wurtrnan RJ. Brain serotonin content physiological dependence on plasma tryptophan levels. Science 1971;173:149-151.
- .Figueras G, Perez V, San Martino O, et al. Pretreatment platelet 5-HT concentration predicts the short-term response to paroxetine in major depression: Grupo de Trastornos Afectivos. Biol Psychiatry 1999;46(4):518-524.
- .Fuller RW. Biochemical pharmacology of the serotonin system. Adv Neurol 1986;43:469-480. (Review)
- .Gillman PK, Bartlett JR, Bridges PK, et al. Relationships between tryptophan concentrations in human plasma, cerebrospinal fluid and cerebral cortex following tryptophan infusion. Neuropharmacology 1980;19:1241-1242.
- .Green AR, Aronson JK. Metabolism of an oral tryptophan load III: effect of a pyridoxine supplement. Br J Clin Pharmacol 1980;10(6):617-619.
- .Green AR, Aronson JK, Cowen PJ. The pharmacokinetics of L-tryptophan following its intravenous and oral administration. Br J Clin Pharmacol 1985;20(4):317-321.
- .Green AR, Aronson JK, Curzon G, et al. Metabolism of an oral tryptophan load: I: effects of dose and pretreatment with tryptophan. Br J Clin Pharmacol 1980;10(6):603-610.
- .Green AR, Bloomfield MR, Woods HF, et al. Metabolism of an oral tryptophan load by women and evidence against the induction of tryptophan pyrrolase by oral contraceptives. Br J Clin Pharmacol 1978;5(3):233-241.
- .Ito J, Hosaki Y, Torigoe Y, et al. Identification of substances formed by decomposition of peak E substance in tryptophan. Food Chem Toxicol 1992;30(1):71-81.
- .Jiang, GC-T, Yohrling GJ IV, Schmitt JD, et al. Identification of substrate orienting and phosphorylation sites within tryptophan hydroxylase using homology-based molecular modeling. J Mol Biol 2000;302(4):1005-1017.
- .Johnson L, El-Khoury A, Aberg-Wistedt A, et al. Tryptophan depletion in lithium-stabilized patients with affective disorder. Int J Neuropsychopharmacol 2001;4(4):329-336.
- .Kamb ML, Murphy JJ, Jones JL, et al. Eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome in L-tryptophan-exposed patients. JAMA 1992;267(1):77-82.
- .Kim SW, Park SY, Hwang O. Up-regulation of tryptophan hydroxylase expression and serotonin synthesis by sertraline. Mol Pharmacol 2002;61(4):778-785.
- .Kimball RW, Friedman AP, Vallejo E. Effect of serotonin in migraine patients. Neurology 1960;10:107-111.
- .Lehmann J, Persson S, Walinder J, et al. Tryptophan malabsorption in dementia: improvement in certain cases after tryptophan therapy as indicated by mental behavior and blood analysis. Acta Psychiat Scand 1981;64:123-131.
- .Lee NS, Muhs G, Wagner GC, et al. Dietary pyridoxine interaction with tryptophan or histidine on brain serotonin and histamine metabolism. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1988;29(3):559-564.
- .Livingston MG, Livingston HM. Monoamine oxidase inhibitors: an update on drug interactions. Drug Saf 1996;14(4):219-227. (Review)
- .Loew D. [L-Tryptophan: an essential amino acid for structural and functional metabolism.] Fortschr Med 1997;115:40-42. [German]
- .Lucini V, Lucca A, Catalano M, et al. Predictive value of tryptophan/large neutral amino acids ratio to antidepressant response. J Affect Disord 1996;36(3-4):129-133.
- .Marley E, Wozniak KM. Interactions of non-selective monoamine oxidase inhibitors, tranylcypromine and nialamide, with inhibitors of 5-hydroxytryptamine, dopamine or noradrenaline re-uptake. J Psychiatr Res 1984;18(2):191-203.
- .Martin RW, Duffy J, Engel AG, et al. The clinical spectrum of the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome associated with L-tryptophan ingestion: clinical features in 20 patients and aspects of pathophysiology. Ann Intern Med 1990;113:124-134.
- .Martin TG. Serotonin syndrome. Ann Emerg Med 1996;28(5):520-526. (Review)
- .Mauri MC, Boscati L, Volonteri LS, et al. Predictive value of amino acids in the treatment of major depression with fluvoxamine. Neuropsychobiology 2001;44(3):134-138.
- .Messiha FS. Fluoxetine: adverse effects and drug-drug interactions. J Toxicol Clin Toxicol 1993;31(4):603-630.
- .Meyer JS, Welch KM, Deshmukh VD, et al. Neurotransmitter precursor amino acids in the treatment of multi-infarct dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. J Am Geriatr Soc 1977;25(7):289-298.
- .Mitchell PB. Drug interactions of clinical significance with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. Drug Saf 1997;17(6):390-406. (Review)
- .Modlinger RS, Schonmuller JM, Arora SP. Stimulation of adolesterone, renin, and cortisol by tryptophan. J Clin Endocrin Metab 1979;48(4):599-603.
- .Moller SE. 5-HT uptake inhibitors and tricyclic antidepressants: relation between tryptophan availability and clinical response in depressed patients. Eur Neuropsychopharmacol 1990;1(1):41-44.
- .
- .Moller SE, Amdisen A. Plasma neutral amino acids in mania and depression: variation during acute and prolonged treatment with L-tryptophan. Biol Psychiatr 1979;14(1):131-139.
- .Moreno FA, Heninger GR, McGahuey CA, et al. Tryptophan depletion and risk of depression relapse: a prospective study of tryptophan depletion as a potential predictor of depressive episodes. Biol Psychiatry 2000;48(4):327-329.
- .Moskowitz DS, Pinard G, Zuroff DC, et al. The effect of tryptophan on social interaction in everyday life: a placebo-controlled study. Neuropsychopharmacology 2001;25(2):277-289.
- .Nedopil N, Einhaupl K, Ruther E, et al. L-tryoptophan in chronic insomnia. In: Schlossberger HG, Kochen W, Linzen B, et al, eds. Progress in tryptophan and serotonin research. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter; 1984;305-309.
- .Neumeister A, Konstantinidis A, Stastny J, et al. Association between serotonin transporter gene promoter polymorphism (5HTTLPR) and behavioral responses to tryptophan depletion in healthy women with and without family history of depression. Arch Gen Psych 2002;59(7):613-620.
- .Nielson HK, Hurrell RF. Content and stability of tryptophan in foods. In: Schlossberger HG, Kochen W, Linzen B, et al, eds. Progress in tryptophan and serotonin research. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter; 1984;527-534.
- .Niskamen P, Huttunen M, Tamminen T, et al. The daily rhythm of plasma tryptophan and tyrosine in depression. Br J Psychiatr 1976;128:67-73.
- .Oates JA, Sjoerdsma A. Neurologic effects of tryptophan in patients receiving a monoamine oxidase inhibitor. Neurology 1960;10:1076-1078.
- .Ooi TK. The serotonin syndrome. Anaesthesia 1991;46:507-508.
- .Pellegrino TC, Bayer BM. Specific serotonin reuptake inhibitor-induced decreases in lymphocyte activity require endogenous serotonin release. Neuroimmunomodulation 2000;8(4):179-187.
- .Perez V, Bel N, Celada P, et al. Relationship between blood serotonergic variables, melancholic traits, and response to antidepressant treatments. J Clin Psychopharmacol 1998;18(3):222-230.
- .Peters EJ, Slager SL, McGrath PJ, et al. Investigation of serotonin-related genes in antidepressant response. Mol Psychiatry 2004;9(9):879-889.
- .Poldinger W, Calanchini B, Schwarz W. A functional-dimensional approach to depression: serotonin deficiency as a target syndrome in a comparison of 5-hydroxytryptophan and fluvoxamine. Psychopathology 1991;24(2):53-81.
- .Radomski JW, Dursun SM, Reveley MA, et al. An exploratory approach to the serotonin syndrome: an update of clinical phenomenology and revised diagnostic criteria. Med Hypotheses 2000;55(3):218-224.
- .Rujescu D, Giegling I, Bondy B, et al. Association of anger-related traits with SNPs in the TPH gene. Mol Psychiatry 2002;7(9):1023-1029.
- .Quintana J. Platelet serotonin and plasma tryptophan decreases in endogenous depression: clinical, therapeutic, and biological correlations. J Affect Disord 1992;24(2):55-62.
- .Schneider-Helmert D, Spinweber CL. Evaluation of L-tryptophan for treatment of insomnia: a review. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 1986;89(1):1-7. (Review)
- .Serretti A, Lilli R, Smeraldi E. Pharmacogenetics in affective disorders. Eur J Pharmacol 2002;438(3):117-128. (Review)
- .Serretti A, Zanardi R, Cusin C, et al. Tryptophan hydroxylase gene associated with paroxetine antidepressant activity. Eur Neuropsychopharmacol 2001;11(5):375-380.
- .Shaw DM. Tricyclic antidepressants, tryptophan and affective disorder. Postgrad Med J 1976;52(3 Suppl):47-51.
- .Shaw DM, Johnson AL, MacSweeney DA. Tricyclic antidepressants and tryptophan in unipolar affective disorder. Lancet 1972;2(7789):1245.
- .Shimeno H, Fukumoto Y, Fuji M, et al. Effect of combined administration of tryptophan with putative tryptophan pyrrolase inhibitors, DL-3-pyridylalanine, allopurinol or nicotinamide, on brain serotonin concentration. Chem Pharm Bull (Tokyo) 1984;32(6):2353-2363.
- .Smith KA, Fairburn CG, Cowen PJ. Symptomatic relapse in bulimia nervosa following acute tryptophan depletion. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1999;56(2):171-176.
- .Spillmann MK, Van der Does AJ, Rankin MA, et al. Tryptophan depletion in SSRI-recovered depressed outpatients. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 2001;155(2):123-127.
- .Steiner W, Fontaine R. Toxic reaction following the combined administration of fluoxetine and tryptophan: five case reports. Biol Psychiatry 1986;21:1067-1071.
- .Sternbach H. The serotonin syndrome. Am J Psychiatry 1991;148(6):705-713. (Review)
- .Sternberg EM. Pathogenesis of L-tryptophan eosinophilia myalgia syndrome. Adv Exp Med Biol 1996;398:325-330.
- .Sternberg EM, Van Woert MH, Young SN, et al. Development of a scleroderma-like illness during therapy with L-5-hydroxytryptophan and carbidopa. N Engl J Med 1980;303(14):782-787.
- .Toyo’oka T, Yamazaki T, Tanimoto T, et al. Characterization of contaminants in EMS-associated L-tryptophan samples by high-performance liquid chromatography. Chem Pharm Bull (Tokyo) 1991;39(3):820-822.
- .Trucksess MW. Separation and isolation of trace impurities in L-tryptophan by high-performance liquid chromatography. J Chromatogr 1993;630(1-2):147-150.
- .Trucksess MW, Thomas FS, Page SW. High-performance liquid chromatographic determination of 1,1′-ethylidenebis(L-tryptophan) in L-tryptophan preparations. J Pharm Sci 1994;83(5):720-722.
- .van der Mast RC, Fekkes D. Serotonin and amino acids: partners in delirium pathophysiology? Semin Clin Neuropsychiatry 2000;5(2):125-131. (Review)
- .van Praag HM. Precursors of serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine in the treatment of depression. Adv Biol Psychiatry 1984;14:54-68.
- .van Praag HM, Lemus C. Monoamine precursors in the treatment of psychiatric disorders. In: Wurtman RJ, Wurtman JJ, eds. Nutrition and the brain. Vol. 7. New York: Raven Press; 1986. (Review)
- .Walinder J, Carlsson A, Persson R. 5-HT reuptake inhibitors plus tryptophan in endogenous depression. Acta Psychiatr Scand Suppl 1981;290:179-190.
- .Werbach MR. Foundations of nutritional medicine. Tarzana, CA: Third Line Press; 1997. (Review)
- .Williamson BL, Benson LM, Tomlinson AJ, et al. On-line HPLC-tandem mass spectrometry analysis of contaminants of L-tryptophan associated with the onset of the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. Toxicol Lett 1997;92:139-148.
- .Wolfe F, Russell IJ, Vipraio G, et al. Serotonin levels, pain threshold, and fibromyalgia symptoms in the general population. J Rheumatol 1997;24(3):555-559.
- .Wood K, Swade C, Harwood J, et al. Comparison of methods for the determination of total and free tryptophan in plasma. Clin Chim Acta 1977;80:229-303.
- .Wynn V, Adams PW, Folkard J, et al. Tryptophan, depression and steroidal contraception. J Steroid Biochem 1975;6(6):965-970.
- .Young AH, Hughes JH, Marsh VR, et al. Acute tryptophan depletion attenuates auditory event related potentials in bipolar disorder: a preliminary study. J Affect Disord 2002;69(1-3):83-92.
- .Yunus MB, Dailey JW, Aldag JC, et al. Plasma tryptophan and other amino acids in primary fibromyalgia: a controlled study. J Rheumatol 1992;19(1):90-94.