In a study prompted in part by suggestions from people with mental illness, Johns Hopkins researchers found that a history of Candida
yeast infections was more common in a group of men with schizophrenia
or bipolar disorder than in those without these disorders, and that
women with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder who tested positive for Candida
performed worse on a standard memory test than women with schizophrenia
or bipolar disorder who had no evidence of past infection.
The researchers caution that their findings, described online on May 4 in npj Schizophrenia—a new publication from Nature Publishing Group—do not establish a cause-and-effect relationship between mental illness
and yeast infections but may support a more detailed examination into
the role of lifestyle, immune system weaknesses and gut-brain
connections as contributing factors to the risk of psychiatric disorders
and memory impairment.
"It's far too early to single out Candida infection
as a cause of mental illness or vice versa," says Emily Severance,
Ph.D., assistant professor of pediatrics and member of the Stanley
Division of Developmental Neurovirology at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine. "However, most Candida infections can be
treated in their early stages, and clinicians should make it a point to
look out for these infections in their patients with mental illness."
She adds that Candida infections can also be prevented by
decreased sugar intake and other dietary modifications, avoidance of
unnecessary antibiotics, and improvement of hygiene.
Candida albicans is a yeastlike fungus naturally found
in small amounts in human digestive tracts, but its overgrowth in warm,
moist environments causes burning, itching symptoms, thrush (rashes in
the throat or mouth) in infants and those with weakened immune systems,
and sexually transmittable genital yeast infections in men and women. In
its more serious forms, it can enter the bloodstream. In most people,
the body's own healthy bacteria and functioning immune system prevent
its overgrowth.
Severance says she and her team focused on a possible association between Candida
susceptibility and mental illness in the wake of new evidence
suggesting that schizophrenia may be related to problems with the immune
system, and because some people with weakened immune systems are more
susceptible to fungal infections.
Also, she says, patients and parents of patients had shared personal
stories and testimonials with the researchers about their experience
with yeast infections, and these discussions prompted the investigation
into possible links between mental illness and the microbiome—the body's
natural collection of bacteria. The researchers, she adds, chose to
focus on Candida because it is one of the most common types of yeast in the body.
For the study, colleagues from the Sheppard Pratt Health System took
blood samples from a group of 808 people between the ages of 18 and 65.
This group was composed of 277 controls without a history of mental
disorder, 261 individuals with schizophrenia and 270 people with bipolar disorder. The researchers used the blood samples to quantify the amount of IgG class antibodies to Candida,
which indicates a past infection with the yeast. After accounting for
factors like age, race, medications and socioeconomic status, which
could skew the results, they looked for patterns that suggested links
between mental illness and infection rates.
Significantly, the team says, it found no connection between the presence of Candida
antibodies and mental illness overall in the total group. But when the
investigators looked only at men, they found 26 percent of those with
schizophrenia had Candida antibodies, compared to 14 percent of
the control males. There wasn't any difference found in infection rate
between women with schizophrenia (31.3 percent) and controls (29.4
percent). The higher infection rate percentages in women over men likely
reflects an increased susceptibility for this type of infection in all
women.
Men with bipolar disorder had clear increases in Candida as
well, with a 26.4 percent infection rate, compared to only 14 percent in
male controls. But, after accounting for additional variables related
to lifestyle, the researchers found that the association between men
with bipolar disorder and Candida infection could likely be attributed to homelessness. However, the link between men with schizophrenia and Candida
infection persisted and could not be explained by homelessness or other
environmental factors. Many people who are homeless are subjected to
unpredictable changes in stress, sanitation and diet, which can lead to
infections like those caused by Candida.
Severance says the data add support to the idea that environmental
exposures related to lifestyle and immune system factors may be linked
to schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and that those factors may be
different for each illness. Similarly, specific mental illnesses and
related symptoms may be very different in men versus women.
This Johns Hopkins research group, led by Robert Yolken, M.D.,
director of the Stanley Division of Developmental Neurovirology, had
previously shown that toxoplasmosis infection could trigger
schizophrenia, and this could lead to neurocognitive problems. The
organism that causes toxoplasmosis is a parasite that uses cats as its
primary host, but it can also infect humans and other mammals.
To determine whether infection with Candida affected any
neurological responses, all participants in the new study took a
30-minute assessment of cognitive tasks to measure immediate memory,
delayed memory, attention skills, use of language and visual-spatial
skills.
Each of the five skills tests are scored based on an adjusted
100-point system. Results showed that control men and women with and
without prior Candida infection had no measureable differences in
scores in the five neurological responses. However, the researchers
noticed that women with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder who had a
history of Candida infection had lower scores on the memory
portions of this test compared to those women with no prior infection.
For example, women with schizophrenia and the highest Candida
antibody levels scored about an average of 11 points lower on the test
for immediate memory than the controls, from a score of 68.5 without
infection to 57.4 with infection. And the women with schizophrenia and
the highest Candida antibody levels scored almost 15 points lower
on the test for delayed memory, from a score of 71.4 without infection
to 56.2 with infection. The effect of Candida infection in women
with bipolar disorder on memory test scores was smaller than that seen
in women with schizophrenia but was still measureable.
"Although we cannot demonstrate a direct link between Candida infection and physiological brain processes, our data show that some factor associated with Candida
infection, and possibly the organism itself, plays a role in affecting
the memory of women with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and this is
an avenue that needs to be further explored," says Severance. "Because Candida
is a natural component of the human body microbiome, yeast overgrowth
or infection in the digestive tract, for example, may disrupt the
gut-brain axis. This disruption in conjunction with an abnormally
functioning immune system could collectively disturb those brain
processes that are important for memory."
Severance says they plan to take their studies of the gut-brain
connection into mouse models to test for a cause-and effect-relationship
with Candida and memory deficits.
The researchers emphasized that the current study design had
limitations. For example, they were unable to tell where in the body the
infection was located and whether or not participants had a current or
past infection of Candida. The researchers were also not able to account for every possible lifestyle variable that might contribute to these results.
The researchers in the Stanley Division of Developmental
Neurovirology are investigating whether pathogens, such as bacteria or
viruses, may contribute or trigger certain mental disorders.
SOURCE:
MedicalXpress and Provided by:
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine



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