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#1
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Contagious Insanity?
Is it possible for a contagious disease to cause the symptoms of a recognized mental illness? Is it possible for a specific mental illness to be appreciably contagious beyond a small group of people, or beyond a group of people who already have mental problems?
It seems that a lot of illnesses that were once thought to be purely psychic have an identifiable physical component. Is it possible for any of those physical components to be transferrable from person to person?
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"Ridicule is the only weapon that can be used against unintelligible propositions. Ideas must be distinct before reason can act upon them." If you don't stop to analyze the snot spray, you are missing that which is best in life. - Miller I'm not sure why this is, but I actually find this idea grosser than cannibalism. - Excalibre, after reading one of my surefire million-seller business plans. |
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#2
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Rabies similarly has symptoms which would be regarded as psychotic. There may be many other such diseases. |
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#3
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Whan a diagnosis of mental illness is made, an organic cause should always be ruled out first.
There are several diseases that have effects on mental health, but I would think most of them would be highly unlikely to spread to large numbers of people. Any disease that causes high fevers can cause delirium, which could look like dementia. Kuru and CJD can cause symptoms that could look like a psychosis or dementia, but you have to be infected by prions. Poisoning with Ergot caused St Vitus' dance, but again, you have to eat the Ergot infected grain products and physicians would be unlikely to consider the symptoms suggestive of mental illness nowadays. Ingestion of hallucinogenic substances, adulterated alcohol etc could cause hallucinations and delusions, but would again be limited to those who had taken the substances. Dementias, temporal lobe epilepsy and some brain tumours can cause hallucinations, altered behaviours and other symptoms the could be wrongly identified as a mental illness, but those aren't contagious. You might want to think about mass hysteria, "folie a deux" and such things as contagious mental illness, but I'm not sure that experts in the field would. Many mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, Bi-polar disorder and depression have a genetic component, but I'm not sure if that is what you're getting at. |
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#5
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I knew about CJD, syphilis, rabies, et al. but I apparently blanked on all of them, because they weren't what I was thinking of. That is, I'm not really interested in simple degerations of the mind: Those diseases have interesting symptoms, but the final result is the complete degeneration of the brain. I want to know if something like clinical depression or schizophrenia is contagious in the same way syphilis would be: Stranger-to-stranger transmission.
Ergotism, bad booze, and LSD consumption for that matter aren't really contagious, so they aren't part of this thread at all. "Folie a deux" is closer, but as I understand it, it's very limited: The two people must be emotionally linked somehow, or there is no way they could share in the same delusion. Strep causing OCD is precisely what I was thinking about, because I read about it in Reader's Digest a couple years ago and it has festered in my mind like a herpes virus in remission. (No, I don't subscribe. I read the article in a doctor's office, which was either ironic or really great marketing.) Encephalitis lethargica comes to mind, incidentally, but it is just on the border of what I'm talking about. I suppose I'm falling into a definitional trap, but I still think there's some difference between a neurological disorder and a mental disorder. The people who had the "sleepy sickness" didn't become delusional or otherwise turn into different people, they simply lost their link to the outside world. I'm willing to admit that my topic could be malformed. But the interest the OCD-causing strep holds for me is the subtlety of the causative chain, and the profound change it effects: The immune system, kicked into action by the strep bacteria, begins to kill off the basal ganglia in an autoimmune response. The fact that something as personality-altering as OCD arises from that is amazing, as well as the fact that it doesn't completely destroy the brain in the process. Is there anything else like it that we know of? |
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#6
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The West Nile virus can cause encephalitus, which can cause neurological problems that are similar to mental illnesses in some ways.
Researchers also think that schizophrenia may be linked to an endogenous retrovirus called HERV-W carried on human RNA, found in the cerebrospinal fluid of 8% of chronic schizophenics and 30% of acute scizophrenics. As I understand it, it's not exactly a contagious virus, but is instead an ancient virus that worked it's way into the genetic code millions of years ago and may now cause schizophrenia when triggered by something else, like the herpes virus or certain diseases in early childhood or in utero. |
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#7
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There's some evidence that borna virus may cause depression in humans
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