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Retroviruses and schizophrenia in Jamaica
Authors:Pamela E. B. Rodgers-Johnson   Frederick W. Hickling   Aggrey Irons   Bruce K. Johnson   Maureen Irons-Morgan   Gary A. Stone  Clarence J. Gibbs
Affiliation:(1) Department of Medicine, University of the West Indies, Kingston 7, Jamaica;(2) Psychotherapy Associates, Kingston, Jamaica;(3) Bellevue Hospital, Kingston, Jamaica;(4) Laboratory of Central Nervous System Studies, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
Abstract:Reports of an 18-fold higher incidence of schizophrenia among second-generation Afro-Caribbeans, and especially Jamaican migrants in the United Kingdom were soon called “an epidemic of schizophrenia,” with the inference that a novel virus, likely to be perinatally transmitted, was a possible etiological agent. This intriguing observation led us to explore a possible link with human T-cell lymphotropic virus type one (HTLV-I), because it is a virus that is endemic in the Caribbean Islands, is perinatally transmitted, known to be neuropathogenic, and the cause of a chronic myelopathy (tropical spastic paraparesis/ HTLV-I associated myelopathy). We therefore examined inpatients at the Bellevue Mental Hospital, Kingston, Jamaica and did standard serological tests for retroviruses HTLV-I and HTLV-II and HIV-I and HIV-II on 201 inpatients who fulfilled ICD-9 and DSM III-R criteria for schizophrenia. Our results produced important negative data, since the seropositivity rates for HTLV-I, the most likely pathogen, were no greater than the seropositivity range for HTLV-I carriers in this island population, indicating that HTLV-I and the other retroviruses tested do not play a primary etiological role in Jamaican schizophrenics.
Keywords:Schizophrenia  virus  HTLV-I  Afro-Caribbeans
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