Health&Wellness Magazine January 2016 | Page 40

40 & January 2016 | Read this issue and more at www.healthandwellnessmagazine.net | Could Depression Be Caused by an Infection or Inflammation? Researchers still trying to prove connection By Angela S. Hoover, Staff Writer In the beginning of the 20th century, it was proposed that psychiatric illness was the result of chronic infection. Adolph Meyer of John Hopkins Medical School popularized and taught this theory. Around 1907, one of his former students, Henry Cotton, began extracting his patients’ teeth, tonsils, testicles, ovaries and even colons at the New Jersey State Hospital for the Insane in an effort to cure them. Though not well known today, Cotton gained prestige and accolades in his day. His 1921 book, “The Defective Delinquent and Insane: The Relation of Focal Infections to Their Causation, Treatment and Prevention,” was well received by “eminent physicians and surgeons,” according to The New York Times. Cotton went on to run a successful private practice for the high society circles in Trenton, N.J. But after his death in 1933, interest in his cures dissipated, due to his patients’ mortality rates only being around 45 percent. And while it is likely his barbaric treatments did no more than disfigure and further traumatize his patients, there just may be something to the belief that infection – and with it, inflammation – may be involved in some forms of mental illness. A paper published in the journal Biology of Mood and Anxiety Disorders late last year asserted depression should be thought of as an infectious disease. “Depressed patients act physically sick,” Turhan Canli wrote. “They’re tired; they lose their appetite; they don’t want to get out of bed. The idea that depression is caused simply by changes in serotonin is not panning out. We need to think about other possible causes and treatments for psychiatric disorders.” Canli noted how certain infections of the brain, most notably Toxoplasma gondii, can result in emotional disturbances that mimic psychiatric conditions. He also said numerous pathogens have been associated with mental illnesses, such as Borna disease virus, Epstein-Barr and certain strains of herpes, including varicella zoster, the virus that causes chicken pox and shingles. Canli believes the pathogens acting directly on the brain may result in psychiatric symptoms and also that autoimmune activity triggered by infection may also contribute. In a Danish study published in an issue of JAMA Psychiatry in 2013, researchers studied the medical records of more than 3 million people. They found those with a history of hospitalization for infection had a 62-percent increased risk of later developing a mood disorder, including depression and bipolar disorder. The study also reported a past history of an autoimmune disorder increased the risk of a future disorder by 45 percent. The Antibodies of the Immune System Autoantibodies were first reported in schizophrenic patients in the 1930s. Further research has detected antibodies with various neurotransmitter receptors in the brains of psychiatric patients, and a number of brain disorders, including multiple sclerosis, are known to involve abnormal immune system activity. Researchers at the University of Virginia recently identified a previously unknown network of vessels directly connecting the brain with the immune system. They concluded the relationship between the two could significantly contribute to certain neurologic and psychiatric conditions. Infection and autoimmune activity result in inflammation, and multiple studies have linked depression with elevated inflammation markers. However, to date, the research only finds associations and does not yet prove cause and effect between inflammation and mental health. The “immune-inflammatory system” is at the core of mental illness, and psychiatric disorders may be an unfortunate cost of our powerful immune defenses, says Dr. Roger McIntyre, a professor of psychiatry and pharmacology at the University of Toronto. “Our immune-inflammatory system doesn’t distinguish between what’s provoking it,” McIntyre said. Stressors of any kind – physical or sexual abuse, sleep deprivation, grief, etc. – can activate the immune system’s response. “For reasons other than fighting infection, our immune-inflammatory response can stay activated for weeks, months or years and result in collateral damage,” McIntyre said. He implicated inflammation in general – not inflammation caused by infection or as a direct effect of infection itself – as a major contributor to mental disorders. “It’s unlikely that most people with a mental illness have it as a result of infection,” he said. “But it would be reasonable to hypothesize that a subpopulation of people with depression or bipolar disorder or schizophrenia ended up that way because an infection activated their immune-inflammatory system.” Infection, particularly in the womb, could work in tandem with genetics, psychosocial factors and one’s diet and microbiome to influence immune and inflammatory activity and, in turn, increase the risk of psychiatric disease, according to McIntyre. This past November, new research claimed inflammation is causing depression in about one-third of patients. Researchers at Emory University in Georgia have found high levels of inflammation are associated with a “failure to communicate” between two parts of the brain, Like us @healthykentucky the ventral striatum and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Additionally, they found about one-third of people diagnosed with depression have markers of elevated inflammation levels in their blood. The findings also suggest chronic inflammation can affect the brain in ways that are connected w ]