Detection of borna disease virus-reactive antibodies from patients with psychiatric disorders and from horses by electrochemiluminescence immunoassay

Abstract:

The prevalence of Borna disease virus (BDV)-specific antibodies among patients with psychiatric disorders and healthy individuals has varied in several reports using several different serological assay methods. A reliable and specific method for anti-BDV antibodies needs to be developed to clarify the pathological significance of BDV infections in humans.

We developed a new electrochemiluminescence immunoassay (ECLIA) for the antibody to BDV that uses two recombinant proteins of BDV, p40 and p24 (full length). Using this ECLIA, we examined 3,476 serum samples from humans with various diseases and 917 sera from blood donors in Japan for the presence of anti-BDV antibodies.

By ECLIA, 26 (3.08%) of 845 schizophrenia patients and 9 (3.59%) of 251 patients with mood disorders were seropositive for BDV. Among 323 patients with other psychiatric diseases, 114 with neurological diseases, 75 with chronic fatigue syndrome, 85 human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients, 50 with autoimmune diseases including rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosis and 17 with leprosy, there was no positive case except one case each with alcohol addiction, AIDS, and dementia.

Although 19 (1.36%) of 1,393 patients with various ocular diseases, 10 (1.09%) of 917 blood donors, and 3 (4.55%) of 66 multitransfused patients were seropositive for BDV-specific antigen, high levels of seroprevalence in schizophrenia patients and young patients (16 to 59 years old) with mood disorders were statistically significant.

The immunoreactivity of seropositive sera could be verified for specificity by blocking with soluble p40 and/or p24 recombinant protein. Anti-p24 antibody was more frequent than p40 antibody in most cases, and in some psychotic patients antibody profiles showed only p40 antibody. Although serum positive for both p40 and p24 antibodies was not found in this study, the p40 ECLIA count in schizophrenia patients was higher than that of blood donors.

Furthermore, we examined 90 sera from Japanese feral horses. Antibody profiles of control human samples are similar to that of naturally BDV-infected feral horses. We concluded that BDV infection was associated in some way with psychiatric disorders.

 

Source: Yamaguchi K, Sawada T, Naraki T, Igata-Yi R, Shiraki H, Horii Y, Ishii T, Ikeda K, Asou N, Okabe H, Mochizuki M, Takahashi K, Yamada S, Kubo K, Yashiki S, Waltrip RW 2nd, Carbone KM. Detection of borna disease virus-reactive antibodies from patients with psychiatric disorders and from horses by electrochemiluminescence immunoassay. Clin Diagn Lab Immunol. 1999 Sep;6(5):696-700. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC95757/ (Full article)

 

Screening instruments for psychiatric morbidity in chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Physicians require a screening instrument to detect psychiatric disorders in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Different threshold scores on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale (HAD) and the mental health scale of the Medical Outcome Survey (MOS) were compared with two gold standards for the presence or absence of psychiatric disorder, standard diagnostic criteria (DSM-III-R) and a threshold score for the number of psychiatric symptoms at a standardized psychiatric interview (Revised Clinical Interview Schedule total cut-off score of 11/12). They were compared by use of validating coefficients and receiver operating characteristics in 136 consecutive CFS medical outpatients.

The HAD scale at cut-off of 9/10 was a valid and efficient screening instrument for anxiety and depression by comparison with both gold standards. The MOS mental health scale at its recommended cut-off score of 67/68 yielded too many false-positives to be recommended as a psychiatric screening instrument in CFS patients.

 

Source: Morriss RK, Wearden AJ. Screening instruments for psychiatric morbidity in chronic fatigue syndrome. J R Soc Med. 1998 Jul;91(7):365-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1296809/ (Full article)

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome: relationships of self-ratings and actigraphy

Abstract:

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome is a baffling disease potentially affecting millions of Americans. Self-rating scales were developed to assess this condition but have yet to be validated with objective measures of activity. The present study of a 45-yr.-old man evaluated the relationships between scores on self-rating scales used to measure Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and actigraphy. Measured activity was related to predictors of fatigue but not to fatigue. The implications of these findings are discussed.

 

Source: Jason LA, Tryon WW, Frankenberry E, King C. Chronic fatigue syndrome: relationships of self-ratings and actigraphy. Psychol Rep. 1997 Dec;81(3 Pt 2):1223-6. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9461755

 

Cognitive distortions of somatic experiences: revision and validation of a measure

Abstract:

The article reports on the revision of the Cognitive Errors Questionnaire (CEQ). The CEQ which was originally developed to measure cognitive distortions specific to chronic pain, has been significantly shortened and made applicable to a wider range of somatic problems.

The Cognitive Errors Questionnaire-Revised (CEQ-R) contains two subscales: Somatic–distortions specific to somatic experiences; and General–distortions to everyday life events. Validation of the scale with CFS, depressed, and chronic pain groups and healthy controls confirms the CEQ-R loads onto general and somatic factors. Both subscales have high internal consistency and good test-retest reliability.

The pattern of subjects’ responses to the CEQ-R scores showed that the depressed group scored significantly higher on the General CEQ-R scale than the other groups, whereas the CFS andchronic pain groups scored higher than healthy controls on the Somatic CEQ-R. Somatic CEQ-R scores showed a significant decrease over the course of a pain management program, with a concomitant decrease in disability and depression scores. Further analyses showed the Somatic CEQ-R to be significantly related to self and symptom focusing, whereas the General CEQ-R was found to be significantly correlated with higher depression, lower self-esteem, and self focusing.

The CEQ-R may be a useful instrument to examine the relationship between cognitive distortions and disability in a variety of illnesses, and to differentiate primary depression from overlapping somatic disorders.

 

Source: Moss-Morris R, Petrie KJ. Cognitive distortions of somatic experiences: revision and validation of a measure. J Psychosom Res. 1997 Sep;43(3):293-306. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9304555

 

Politics, science, and the emergence of a new disease. The case of chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) emerged as a diagnostic category during the last decade. Initial research suggested that CFS was a relatively rare disorder with a high level of psychiatric comorbidity. Many physicians minimized the seriousness of this disorder and also interpreted the syndrome as being equivalent to a psychiatric disorder. These attitudes had negative consequences for the treatment of CFS.

By the mid-1990s, findings from more representative epidemiological studies indicated considerably higher CFS prevalence rates. However, the use of the revised CFS case definition might have produced heterogeneous patient groups, possibly including some patients with pure psychiatric disorders.

Social scientists have the expertise to more precisely define this syndrome and to develop appropriate and sensitive research strategies for understanding this disease.

Comment in: The biopsychosocial model and chronic fatigue syndrome. [Am Psychol. 1998]

 

Source: Jason LA, Richman JA, Friedberg F, Wagner L, Taylor R, Jordan KM. Politics, science, and the emergence of a new disease. The case of chronic fatigue syndrome. Am Psychol. 1997 Sep;52(9):973-83. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9301342

 

Estimating rates of chronic fatigue syndrome from a community-based sample: a pilot study

Abstract:

Most of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) epidemiological studies have relied on physicians who refer patients having at least six months of chronic fatigue and other symptoms. However, there are a number of potential problems when using this method to derive prevalence statistics.

For example, some individuals with CFS might not have the economic resources to access medical care. Other individuals with CFS might be reluctant to use medical personnel, particularly if they have encountered physicians skeptical of the authenticity of their illness. In addition, physicians that are skeptical of the existence of CFS might not identify cases.

In the present pilot study, a random community sample (N = 1,031) was interviewed by telephone in order to identify and comprehensively evaluate individuals with symptoms of CFS and those who self-report having CFS. Different definitions of CFS were employed, and higher rates (0.2%) of CFS were found than in previous studies. Methodological benefits in using more rigorous epidemiological methods when estimating CFS prevalence rates are discussed.

 

Source: Jason LA, Taylor R, Wagner L, Holden J, Ferrari JR, Plioplys AV, Plioplys S, Lipkin D, Papernik M. Estimating rates of chronic fatigue syndrome from a community-based sample: a pilot study. Am J Community Psychol. 1995 Aug;23(4):557-68. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8546110

 

Dimensional assessment of chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

The absence of laboratory tests and clear criteria to identify homogeneous (sub)groups in patients presenting with unexplained fatigue, and to assess clinical status and disability in these patients, calls for further assessment methods. In the present study, a multi-dimensional approach to the assessment of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is evaluated.

Two-hundred and ninety-eight patients with CFS completed a set of postal questionnaires that assessed the behavioural, emotional, social, and cognitive aspects of CFS. By means of statistical analyses nine relatively independent dimensions of CFS were identified along which CFS-assessment and CFS-research can be directed.

These dimensions were named: psychological well-being, functional impairment in daily life, sleep disturbances, avoidance of physical activity, neuropsychological impairment, causal attributions related to the complaints, social functioning, self-efficacy expectations, and subjective experience of the personal situation. A description of the study sample on these dimensions is presented.

 

Source: Vercoulen JH, Swanink CM, Fennis JF, Galama JM, van der Meer JW, Bleijenberg G. Dimensional assessment of chronic fatigue syndrome. J Psychosom Res. 1994 Jul;38(5):383-92. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7965927

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome. …and study them separately

Comment on: Chronic fatigue syndrome: prevalence and outcome. [BMJ. 1994]

 

Editor,-The struggle over myalgic encephalomyelitis and the chronic fatigue syndrome is not, as S M Lawrie and A J Pelosi suggest, whether they are physical or mental illnesses. Both sides in this debate accept that most illnesses combine organic and psychological factors. The struggle is about methodology and definition and, in particular, how different methodologies and definitions inevitably lead to different findings on the degree to which depression is a perpetuating agent in these conditions.

One side favours studying the chronic fatigue syndrome as a single entity, arguing that there is insufficient knowledge at present to differentiate between different chronic fatigue syndromes. This side prefers Sharpe et al’s broad definition of the syndrome, which includes depressive illness, anxiety disorders, and the hyperventilation syndrome.2 Unsurprisingly, studies that use these criteria find higher levels of depression ) or “psychosocial disorders”-yet another woolly term).

The other side argues that there is sufficient knowledge to distinguish specific chronic fatigue syndromes, particularly the much studied myalgic encephalomyelitis, and that it must be better science in these cases to study such syndromes in their own right. Furthermore, it argues that the study groups used in research based on broadbrush criteria will have been so aetiologically heterogeneous as to invalidate the findings. This side, which includes the national patient organisations, equates myalgic encephalomyelitis with Holmes et als tighter definition of the chronic fatigue syndrome, which focuses more on organic symptoms and, again unsurprisingly, finds lower levels of depression similar to those found in patients with cancer and multiple sclerosis-that is, the levels that might be predicted in any chronic illness.3

You can read the rest of this comment here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2540172/pdf/bmj00440-0054a.pdf

 

Source: Anderson N. Chronic fatigue syndrome. …and study them separately. BMJ. 1994 May 14;308(6939):1298. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2540172/

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome: have flawed assumptions been derived from treatment-based studies?

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome is a disabling disorder that has been studied primarily in clinical settings. In the absence of an adequate epidemiological database, cultural stereotypes have influenced the characterization of chronic fatigue syndrome as “the yuppie flu,” similar to the 19th century characterization of neurasthenia as a disease of the affluent. The limited epidemiological data available and the overall medical-sociological literature call this assumption into question. Only a community “true” prevalence study that is unbiased by help seeking and access to health care can provide an accurate assessment of the risk factors for and the public health ramifications of this disease.

 

Source: Richman JA, Flaherty JA, Rospenda KM. Chronic fatigue syndrome: have flawed assumptions been derived from treatment-based studies? Am J Public Health. 1994 Feb;84(2):282-4. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1615008/

You can read the full article here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1615008/pdf/amjph00453-0124.pdf

 

 

An approach to studies of cancer subsequent to clusters of chronic fatigue syndrome: use of data from the Nevada State Cancer Registry

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has been increasingly associated with immune dysregulation, including depressed natural killer cell activity; this phenomenon is associated with increased susceptibility to cancer. Although anecdotal reports have suggested an association between CFS and cancer, particularly non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and brain cancer, there has been no a priori justification for evaluating such an association and no consideration of relevant parameters, such as length of latent period vs. tumor type.

We reviewed data from the Nevada State Cancer Registry subsequent to a reported outbreak of a CFS-like illness in Nevada that occurred during 1984-1986. We concentrated on non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and brain/CNS tumors, with particular emphasis on persons 15-34 and 35-54 years of age.

An upward trend in the incidence of brain/CNS tumors, which could be related to a national upward trend for this disease, was noted. No consistent trends were noted for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Because of the difficulties inherent in studies of cancer subsequent to various exposures, we evaluated the methodology for determining an association between outbreaks of CFS-like disease and cancer. We propose several approaches that should be considered in future studies for investigation of possible associations between CFS and cancer, including expected latent periods for specific tumors.

 

Source: Levine PH, Atherton M, Fears T, Hoover R. An approach to studies of cancer subsequent to clusters of chronic fatigue syndrome: use of data from the Nevada State Cancer Registry. Clin Infect Dis. 1994 Jan;18 Suppl 1:S49-53. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8148453