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The Role of Infections in Mental Illness
The article below was sent by the Alternative Mental Health Online group. It features the successful application of the Expanded Paradigm we offer at our clinic here. This California clinic is reporting outstanding success. Read it and see why I have been so enthusiastic about how health can be improved if the health care model used is larger than what is typically available in mainstream medicine today.
The
Role of Infections in Mental Illness
by Frank Strick, Clinical Research Director
THE RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR INFECTIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS
(800) 699-2466, Ext. 8314255555
In considering an infectious etiology to
any chronic mental illness there are at least four categories to consider.
First are those infections already recognized to induce psychiatric symptoms.
These include pneumonia, urinary tract infection, sepsis, malaria,
Legionnaire's disease, syphilis, typhoid, diphtheria, HIV, rheumatic fever and
herpes. (Ref: Chuang)
While the psychiatric effects of these infections are known to the medical
field, they are rarely screened for if the initial presentation is made to a
mental health professional. Moreover, the significance of some of these
infections may date back to prenatal development. Research done at the John
Hopkins Children's Center and published in the Archives of General Psychiatry
in 2001 found that mothers with evidence of Herpes Simplex Type 2 infection at
the time of pregnancy had children almost six times more likely to later
develop schizophrenia. And in the US, Europe and Japan, birth clusters of
individuals who develop schizophrenia later in life closely mirror the
seasonal distribution of Ixodes ticks at the time of conception (Lyme
disease).
Second are those parasitic infections such as neurocysticercosis where the
brain is directly invaded by the infective agent through a well-established,
imageable (visible on brain scan) mechanism (cysts, lesions, cerebral swelling
etc.) Signs of psychiatric disease (depression and psychosis) were found in
over 65% of neurocysticercosis cases (caused by a tapeworm whose incidence in
the US is rising due to demographic increases in foreign immigrant
populations.) [Ref: Forlenza] While the mechanisms for psychiatric
manifestations are easy to demonstrate when brain tissue is directly affected,
there are also multiple documented reports in the literature of psychiatric
symptoms associated with other parasites like giardiasis, ascaris (roundworm),
trichinae (cause of trichinosis), and Lyme borrelia and viruses like borna
virus. Documentation also exists of these psychiatric symptoms resolving when
the underlying hidden infection is treated.
Dr. J. Packman of Yale University wrote over ten years ago that "Patients
with parasitic loads are more likely to exhibit mental status changes and
there is an improvement in mental status of a subset of psychiatric patients
following treatment for parasites." In fact, a review of 1300 human cases
of trichinosis in Germany found CNS (central nervous system) involvement in up
to 24% of the cases (Menningeal inflamation or encephalitis). [Ref: Froscher]
Clinically, in cases like neurocysticercosis, the problem is not the lack of a
well-defined mechanism but the lack of mental health practitioners qualified
to make such a diagnosis or even suspect it. Even infectious disease
specialists tend to underestimate the scope of the problem, in part due to
underreporting (neurocysticercosis is not a reportable condition in most
states and the incidence of trichinosis is, we believe, vastly underestimated
according to newly developed antibody assays only made available in 2003).
Next are those parasitic, bacterial and viral infections like toxoplasmosis
and strep where a strong statistical link to mental illness has been
demonstrated but research is underway to establish a causal connection. In
humans acute infection with toxoplasmosis gondii can cause brain lesions,
changes in personality and symptoms of psychosis including delusions and
auditory hallucinations. Researchers at Rockefeller University and NIMH have
suggested that after streptococcal infection some children may be at increased
risk for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. Toxoplasma gondii can alter behavior
and neurotransmitter function. Since 1953, eighteen out of nineteen studies of
T. gondii antibodies in persons with schizophrenia and other severe
psychiatric disorders have reported a higher percentage of T. gondii
antibodies in the affected persons. (For example, in one large study
toxoplasmosis infection was twice as common in mentally handicapped patients
as in healthy controls and in a recent German study of "individuals with
first episode schizophrenia compared to matched controls, 42% of the former
compared to just 11% of the latter had antibodies to toxoplasma").
Two other studies found that exposure to cats (the primary carrier for
toxoplasmosis transmission) in childhood is a risk factor for the development
of schizophrenia. Furthermore, certain antipsychotic and mood-stabilizer drugs
such as Halperidol and Valproic acid inhibited this parasite in vitro at a
concentration below that found in the cerebrospinal fluid and blood of
individuals being treated with this medication, suggesting that some
medications used to treat schizophrenia and bipolar disorder may actually work
by inhibiting the replication of toxoplasmosis gondii. (Ref: Jones-Brando,
Torrey, Yolken)
Other studies have shown that antipsychotic drugs like Thorazine, Haldol and
Clozapine inhibit viral replication and that the cerebrospinal fluid of
patients with recent-onset schizophrenia shows a significant increase in
reverse transcriptase (an enzyme) activity - which is an important component
of infectious retroviruses (a type of virus). Furthermore, when the CSF
(cerebral spinal fluid) from these patients was used to inoculate a New World
monkey cell line there was a tenfold increase in reverse transcriptase
activity which suggests the presence of a replicating virus. Malhotra has
demonstrated the absence of CCR5-32 homozygotes (specific matching genetic
codes) in over 200 schizophrenic patients - which dramatically increases
susceptibility to retroviral infection. (Ref: F.Yee).
It is research like this that has led Johns Hopkins virologist Robert Yolken
and psychiatry professor and former special assistant to the Director of the
National Institute for Mental Health Dr. E. Fuller Torrey to believe that
toxoplasmosis is one of several infectious agents that causes most cases of
schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The idea is not new. In fact, as far back
as 1922 the famous psychiatrist Karl Menninger hypothesized that schizophrenia
was "in most instances the byproduct of viral encephalitis." Torrey
notes that in the late nineteenth century schizophrenia and bipolar disorder
went from being rare diseases to relatively common ones at the same time that
cat ownership became popular. And Yolken designed a retrospective study of
twenty-five hundred families showing that mothers of children who later
developed psychoses were 4.5 times more likely to have antibodies to
toxoplasmosis than the mothers of healthy controls. Due to the frequency of
cat ownership, a large percentage of the US population (up to 50%) has been
exposed to toxoplasmosis but most immunocompetent carriers remain asymptomatic
until another immunological burden such as HIV or a separate parasite weakens
the host defenses and precipitates pathogenic expression. That is what makes
interpretation of the chronic state so tricky and at the Research Institute
for Infectious Mental Illness we make sure to try to identify any parasitic
coinfections before deciding on an appropriate course of treatment.
Finally, while toxoplasmosis gets a lot of attention due to Torrey's and
Yolken's pioneering studies and the known mechanism of brain lesions, there
are many other infective agents that may not target the brain specifically but
can severely affect mental function through the cumulative downstream
consequences of chronic infection. While the importance of this link in the
etiopathogenesis of mental illness is rarely recognized, these focal and
systemic infections are very common and their psychiatric effects often
severe. (Parasites are the most common causes of mortality and morbidity in
the world.) In this nonspecific category are scores of parasites, protozoa,
helminths, bacteria, fungi and viruses which, if not directly invading and
disabling brain tissue and neurotransmitter function, do so indirectly by
depleting the host of essential nutrients, interfering with enzyme functions,
and releasing a massive load of waste products - enteric poisons and toxins
which disrupt brain metabolism. (A single mature adult tapeworm can lay a
million eggs a day and roundworms, which infect about twenty-five per cent of
the world's population, lay 200,000 daily).
Remember, the brain is your body's most energy-intensive organ. It represents
only three percent of your body weight but utilizes twenty-five percent of
your body's oxygen, nutrients and circulating glucose. Therefore any
significant metabolic disruptions can impact brain function first. This link
is borne out statistically. Mental patients have much higher rates of
parasitic infection than the general population. Between 1995 and 1996
researchers at the University of Ancona did stool tests on 238 residents of
four Italian psychiatric institutions and found parasites in 53.8 percent of
the residents including all of those residents with behavioral aberrations(Ref:
Giacometti). In our experience parasites are often implicated in cognitive
dysfunction and chronic emotional stress disorders and, to the untrained eye,
classic symptoms like apathy, exhaustion, confusion, appetite and memory loss,
"nervous stomach," social withdrawal, lethargy and loss of sex drive
and motivation are frequently assumed to signal a depressive disorder without
an adequate differential diagnosis being made or even attempted. Adding to the
confusion, classic indicators of acute infection such as fever or elevated
antibodies often reverse themselves in chronic cases due to secondary
hypothyroidism and immunodepression. Unfortunately, until Western psychiatry
further recognizes that the mind/body connection goes in both directions
patients will continue to suffer from a de facto lack of differential
diagnostic criteria in clinically identical syndromes.
Even for those clinicians who recognize the devastating psychological effects
that chronic intestinal, focal and even dental infections can have on normal
brain function, accurate diagnosis presents formidable challenges. In fact
some standard parasite stool test procedures identify less than ten percent of
active infections and even the "politically correct" holistic
specialty labs miss many infections that are nondetectable in fecal specimens,
have inconsistent shedding patterns, are extra intestinal or otherwise hard to
identify. For example, according to the World Health Organization, over two
billion people are infected with worms, yet rarely will they show up in stool
assays.
(These numbers are not surprising once you realize that the exposure vectors
are potentially everything you eat, drink, breathe and touch. If you think you
have to leave the country to be exposed to exotic parasites, think again. In
fact, try walking into the kitchen of your favorite restaurant and see if the
cook speaks English.)
At the Research Institute for Infectious Mental Illness we use multiple labs
with complementary strengths and a combination of advanced scientific
diagnostic procedures including O & P microscopy, multifluid antigen and
antibody detection, stool cultures, enzyme immunoassay, mucosal markers,
inflammation assays, imaging techniques and other indirect laboratory
indicators combined with extensive historical and clinical evaluations to
identify chronic infectious stressors. (Patients previously diagnosed with
"Chronic Candidiasis" often find that Candida was merely a cofactor
or consequence of more significant infections and infestations which created
obstacles to long-term cure.) "Mental" symptoms often improve
dramatically when hidden neuroimmune infections are treated successfully and
normal brain metabolism resumes, especially in "sudden-onset"
syndromes. After identifying and treating the primary infections we focus on
rebuilding the host's immunological defenses and mucosal integrity to prevent
relapse. Premature nutritional supplementation, even in frank anemia, can be
counterproductive since some vitamins and minerals (e.g., iron) can be growth
factors for microorganisms which the body intentionally downregulates the
uptake of during active infection. But individually formulated subsequent
nutritional supplementation is usually essential for full recovery. We also
screen patients for heavy metals, environmental chemicals, molds and
electromagnetic stressors, "Brain allergies," food sensitivities,
hormone disorders, diet and numerous other variables which can influence
cognitive and affective function. To speed recovery, our evidence-based
Integral Medicine approach may include appropriate treatments from consulting
nutritionists, homeopaths, acupuncturists, herbalists and bodyworkers.
The erosion or loss of brain function is arguably the most frightening and
disabling experience a person can have. Almost by definition, standard
psychological or psychiatric intervention postulates a dichotomy between
disorders of the body and those of the mind and has a long way to go in
recognizing the importance of infectious etiologies in mental health care. The
Research Institute for Infectious Mental Illness provides testing, clinical
and consulting services to clients from all over the world and educates
professionals in this critical area. Long distance phone consultations are
also available.
This article may be reprinted by anyone if the RIIMI clinic contact info is
listed.