| Literature DB >> 28075410 |
Claudia Del Grande1, Luca Galli2, Elisa Schiavi3, Liliana Dell'Osso4, Fabrizio Bruschi5.
Abstract
Toxoplasma gondii, a ubiquitous intracellular parasite, has a strong tropism for the brain tissue, where it forms intracellular cysts within the neurons and glial cells, establishing a chronic infection. Although latent toxoplasmosis is generally assumed to be asymptomatic in immunocompetent individuals, it is now clear that it can induce behavioral manipulations in mice and infected humans. Moreover, a strong relation has emerged in recent years between toxoplasmosis and psychiatric disorders. The link between T. gondii and schizophrenia has been the most widely documented; however, a significant association with bipolar disorder (BD) and suicidal/aggressive behaviors has also been detected. T. gondii may play a role in the etiopathogenesis of psychiatric disorders affecting neurotransmitters, especially dopamine, that are implicated in the emergence of psychosis and behavioral Toxoplasma-induced abnormalities, and inducing brain inflammation by the direct stimulation of inflammatory cytokines in the central nervous system. Besides this, there is increasing evidence for a prominent role of immune dysregulation in psychosis and BD. The aim of this review is to describe recent evidence suggesting a link between Toxoplasma gondii and BD, focusing on the interaction between immune responses and this infectious agent in the etiopathogenesis of psychiatric symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Toxoplasma gondii; antipsychotics and mood stabilizers; bipolar disorder; dopaminergic pathways; immunity; pro-inflammatory cytokines
Year: 2017 PMID: 28075410 PMCID: PMC5371891 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens6010003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1Publications available in PubMed in the last 10 years focusing on the relationship between schizophrenia or bipolar disorder and toxoplasmosis. Search terms were “Toxoplasma gondii”, “toxoplasmosis”, “neuropsychiatric disorders”, “bipolar disorder”, “schizophrenia”, “mania”, “psychotic symptoms”. We only included papers assessing schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
Sero-epidemiological studies investigating the association between T. gondii infection and bipolar disorder.
| Authors (Year), Country | Study Design | Toxo Determination | Sample Size | Description of Association | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delgado Garcia, Rodriguez Perdomo (1980) [ | Case-control study | Toxoplasmin intradermal test | 270 individuals (50 pts with manic-depressive psychosis, 120 neurotics, 100 HC) | The highest percentage of reactors was found among pts with manic-depressive psychosis (66.0%); the intensity of reaction was also higher among these pts. | Small sample size |
| Hinze-Selch et al. (2010) [ | Cross-sectional study | IgG levels | 1110 (270 SCH, 465 MD, 67 schizoaffective disorder, 87 BD, 214 HC) | Additional diagnosis of a personality disorder is significantly associated with | Small sample size of BD pts |
| Tedla et al. (2011) [ | Case-control study | IgG levels | 495 (214 SCH, 171 BD, 71 HC) | Higher | No IgM determination |
| Pearce et al. (2012) [ | Cross-sectional study | IgG levels | 7440 (individuals 15–39 years old from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey) | Significant relationship between | Small number of respondents with both BD I and positive serology for |
| Hamdani et al. (2013) [ | Case-control study | IgM/IgG levels | 216 (110 BD, 106 HC) | BD pts had significantly higher seropositivity to | Small sample size |
| Dickerson et al. (2014) [ | Cross-sectional study | IgM/IgG levels assessed up to three time points | 1114 (57 individual with mania, 743 other psychiatric groups, 314 non-psychiatric controls) | Significantly elevated levels of anti- | Time of |
| Khademvatan et al. (2013) [ | Cross-sectional study | IgM/IgG levels | 317 (117 BD I; 200 HC) | No significant difference in prevalence of anti- | No BD II pts |
| Duffy et al. (2015) [ | Cross-sectional study | IgM/IgG levels | 70 (veteran women) | Positive relationships between | Small sample size |
SCH: schizophrenia; MD: major depression; pts: patients; BD: bipolar disorder; HC: healthy controls.
Studies on the relations between perinatal infection with T. gondii and bipolar disorder.
| Authors (Year), Country | Study Design | Toxo Determination | Sample Size | Description of Association | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xiao et al. (2009) [ | Case-control study | IgG levels and serotyping | 837 (219 sera from pregnant women whose children developed SCH and affective psychotic illnesses in adult life and 618 matched unaffected control mothers) | No association between maternal antibodies to | Moderate sensitivity of serotyping; unknown indicators of the timing of maternal infection |
| Mortensen et al. (2011) [ | Case-control study | IgG levels (neonatal dried blood spots) | 154 (127 BD pts and 127 matched controls) | No association between marker of | Small study samples; absence of information about specific serotypes of |
| Freedman et al. (2016) [ | Case-control study | IgG levels (maternal sera) | 255 (85 BD cases and 170 comparison subjects) | Maternal | Small sample size; absence of information about specific serotypes of |
SCH: schizophrenia; pts: patients; BD: bipolar disorder.