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Nervousness, Parkinson’s. What can happen?

Updated 01/16/2025

Nervousness, in the form of tremors, can be caused by melanocytes.

Melanocytes produce salts or melanin, but sometimes when we are younger, these salts or melanin can heat up the cell or melanocyte a lot, causing the cell plasma to become very liquid and the proteins to dissolve.

These salts release extreme heat, as if it were magma from the earth, which is what makes the cell more liquid and if these salts do not leave the melanocyte or cell, the neurons release chemical messengers that do not execute the order, for the following reason.

By not executing the order of the neuron’s messenger, it repeats the order again, releasing more messengers and if it repeats the order many times, it can cause tremors, nervousness or even Parkinson’s.

This may be caused because the proteins of the melanocytes have dissolved with the salts and the cell cannot expel the gases, for a new order from the neuron, because if the proteins expel the gases from the melanocytes, the chemical messenger executes the order, which is to absorb gases and the neuron, upon executing the correct order, stops.

Melanin or salts in the melanocyte are formed in a uterus called melanosome which isolates the melanin or salt from the melanocyte. This melanosome is inside the melanocyte and in its formation, it has a constitution to withstand extreme temperatures while the melanin or salt is formed and if the melanin or salt breaks, it comes into contact with the proteins of the melanocyte and this can create nervousness.

In old age, white hair can also be a melanosome defect.