Positive Psychiatry - with Rakesh Jain, MD
GLP-1 medications are everywhere right now, but the most important conversation might be the one we are not having loudly enough: what do GLP-1 receptor agonists do to the brain? I go full geek mode on the neurobiology behind incretin mimetics and why semaglutide and tirzepatide may end up mattering to psychiatry as much as they matter to endocrinology. We start with anatomy and access. Endogenous GLP-1 is produced in the gut, but it is also produced by neurons in the brainstem and projected into regions that shape mood, anxiety, memory, and reward. From there, we explore how exogenous GLP-1 drugs can influence the central nervous system through selective blood-brain barrier entry points and vagal afferent pathways, and why receptor “real estate” in the hippocampus, amygdala, VTA, and nucleus accumbens changes the clinical story. Then we dive into mechanisms that matter for positive psychiatry: intracellular signaling (cAMP, kinases, CREB), neurotrophic support through BDNF, and the promise of neuroplasticity as more than a buzzword. We also unpack neuroinflammation and microglia, including how GLP-1 signaling may suppress inflammatory cascades, reduce oxidative stress, and create conditions where cognition and emotional regulation can recover. Finally, we connect GLP-1 to “food noise,” maladaptive salience, and dopamine spiking, highlighting how better top-down executive control could translate into real-world agency without blunting joy in most individuals. www.JainUplift.com
20 episodios
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