| Literature DB >> 26544949 |
Gundula Kösters1,2, Holger Steinberg1, Kenneth Clifford Kirkby3, Hubertus Himmerich2.
Abstract
In the early 20th century, there were few therapeutic options for mental illness and asylum numbers were rising. This pessimistic outlook favoured the rise of the eugenics movement. Heredity was assumed to be the principal cause of mental illness. Politicians, scientists and clinicians in North America and Europe called for compulsory sterilisation of the mentally ill. Psychiatric genetic research aimed to prove a Mendelian mode of inheritance as a scientific justification for these measures. Ernst Rüdin's seminal 1916 epidemiological study on inheritance of dementia praecox featured large, systematically ascertained samples and statistical analyses. Rüdin's 1922-1925 study on the inheritance of "manic-depressive insanity" was completed in manuscript form, but never published. It failed to prove a pattern of Mendelian inheritance, counter to the tenets of eugenics of which Rüdin was a prominent proponent. It appears he withheld the study from publication, unable to reconcile this contradiction, thus subordinating his carefully derived scientific findings to his ideological preoccupations. Instead, Rüdin continued to promote prevention of assumed hereditary mental illnesses by prohibition of marriage or sterilisation and was influential in the introduction by the National Socialist regime of the 1933 "Law for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Offspring" (Gesetz zur Verhütung erbkranken Nachwuchses).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26544949 PMCID: PMC4636330 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1005524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Biography of Ernst Rüdin.
| 19 Apr 1874 | Born in St. Gallen, Switzerland [ |
| 1893–1898 | Study of human medicine in Geneva, Heidelberg, Berlin und Zürich, Swiss state examinations [ |
| 1899–1905 | Psychiatric training in Zürich, Berlin, Basel und Heidelberg (Kraepelin) [ |
| 1901 | Doctoral thesis in Zürich: “On Clinical Forms of Prison Psychoses” [ |
| 1905 | Editor of the “Archives of Racial and Social Biology” founded by Ploetz [ |
| 1907 | Director of the Society for Racial Hygiene [ |
| 1908 | Licence to practice medicine for the German Reich, Co-Publisher of the “Archives of Racial and Social Biology” [ |
| 1909 | Senior physician at the Psychiatric University Clinic of Munich, habilitation on psychiatric illnesses of prison inmates [ |
| 1912 | Designation as a Bavarian civil servant, thereby acquiring German citizenship [ |
| 1918 | Head of the Genealogic-Demographic Department (GDA), the world’s first research facility for psychiatric genetics and epidemiology, at the German Research Institute of Psychiatry ( |
| 1925–1928 | Chair of Psychiatry, University of Basel [ |
| 1928 | Honorary professor of the medical faculty of the University of Munich [ |
| 1931–1945 | Managing director of the DFA (since 1924 the Institute of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Society, now the Max Planck Society) [ |
| 1933 | Chairman of the “Committee II for Racial Hygiene and Racial Policy of the Council of Experts of Racial and Population Policy for the Reich Minister of the Interior” |
| 1933–1939 | Initiation in various international professional societies, e.g. in Japan, France and Hungary, and numerous distinctions [ |
| 1935–1945 | Chairman of the Society of German Neurologists and Psychiatrists ( |
| 1937 | Member of the Nazi Party (NSDAP) [ |
| 1939–1944 | Publisher of the “Archives of Racial and Social Biology”, succeeding Ploetz [ |
| 1945 | Revocation of Swiss citizenship, removal from office by the American military government in Bavaria [ |
| 1949 | Denazification process in Munich: categorised as “ |
| 22 Oct 1952 | Death in Munich [ |
Calculation of the morbid risk using the example of category “both parents unaffected” (category I), with the proband method, simple sib method and Weinberg’s abridged age correction.
| Calculation of the morbid risk | MR = (N/B)x100 = [N/(0xP1+0,5xP2+1xP3)]x100 |
| Lifetimes at risk in category “both parents unaffected” with the abridged Weinberg method: | |
| B = 0xP1+0,5xP2+1xP3 | |
| = 0x1222+0,5x1917+1x118 | |
| = 1076,5 | |
| Affected persons, with the Weinberg simple sibship and proband method:N = 58 secondary cases + 22 probands = 80 | |
| Morbid risk for affective disorders in category I | MR = (N/B)x100 = (80/1076,5)x100 = 7,43% |
| Morbid risk for “other psychiatric conditions” in category I | MR = (N/B)x100 = (101/1076,5)x100 = 9,38% |
MR = morbid risk, N = number of affected persons, B = lifetimes at risk (“Bezugsziffer”), P1 = number of children aged under 14, P2 = number of persons aged 14–68, P3 = number of persons aged above 68.
Fig 1Patients included in the study [28].
The figure was created by the authors on the basis of the data obtained from Rüdin’s manuscript.
Distribution of affective disorders among the siblings of included families.
| Families in total | Affective disorders in the siblings, N (%) | Average number of children per family | Siblings in total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 566 | 633 (16.77) | 6.67 | 3773 |
|
| 84 | 117 (20.24) | 6.88 | 578 |
|
| 650 | 750 (17.24) | 6.69 | 4351 |
Age distribution in category “both parents unaffected”.
| Age of siblings at the time of ascertainment or at time of death | <14 years | 14–68 years | >68 Jahre | Age unknown (not included) | Sum |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| - | 530 (22 | 46 (0) | 1 | 577 (22) |
|
| - | 53 (55 | 3 (3) | - | 56 (58) |
|
| - | 94 (97 | 4 (4) | - | 98 (101) |
|
| 1222 | 1708 (1743) | 111(111) | 1 | 3042 |
|
| 1222 | 2385 (1917) | 164 (118) | 2 | 3773 |
1 The number of patients included in the calculation of morbid risk after applying the Weinberg proband and simple sib method are marked in brackets.
2 11 families contained 2 probands. These were included as “secondary cases”, using the proband method.
3 Two families contained two probands and one secondary case, the latter was counted twice, using the proband method.
4 In three families there were two probands and one sibling with a different psychiatric condition. The latter was included twice, using the proband method.
Main problems and results of the study [28].
| Problem | Results | Discussion |
|---|---|---|
| Are affective disorders hereditary diseases? | Prevalence of affective disorders amongst the descendants of affected patients: 30–35%. | Rüdin considered the inheritance of affective disorders to be proven. |
| Are affective disorders inherited in a simple Mendelian mode of inheritance? | Families with two healthy parents → 7.43% affected children. In a recessive mode of inheritance, 25% affected children are expected. | Recessive mendelian mode of inheritance had to be excluded. |
| Families with one affected parent → 23.82% affected children. In a dominant mode of inheritance, 50% affected children are expected. | Dominant mendelian mode of inheritance had to be excluded. | |
| Which mode of inheritance is the most likely for affective disorders? | Three-locus model with two recessive and one dominant factor, see | Rüdin postulated this mode of inheritance to be the most likely for affective disorders. |
| Calculation of the morbid risk for a given proband | No sufficient results available to formulate a reliable heredity prognosis. | |
| Is the occurence of affective disorders associated with dementia praecox? | Family history of dementia praecox in patients with affective disorders: 15.7%. Family history of dementia praecox in patients with dementia praecox: 45%. | Affective disorders and dementia praecox are inherited separately. |
| Sex ratio | Male: Female = 1:1.7 | Sex ratio is influenced by higher suicide rates in male patients and more frequent hospitalisation in female patients. |
Morbid risk of affective disorders in the offspring of various crosses.
Comparison between empirical values and predicted values for a three-locus model with two recessive and one dominant factor.
| Predicted value from Mendelian crossing for three-locus model with two recessive and one dominant factor | Empirical morbid risk from Rüdin’s study | |
|---|---|---|
| Cross unaffected x unaffected | 10.50% | 7.43% |
| Cross affected x unaffected | 22.50% | 23.82% |
| Cross unaffected x unaffected with otherwise positive family history | 14.40% | 14.94% |
| Cross half siblings | 3.30% | 1.42% |
| Cross affected x affected | 77.40% | Not calculated |