Concerning the relationships between genes, risk factors and immunity in Alzheimer's disease, Autism, Bipolar disorder , multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia and chronic fatigue
Virus infections in infant mice causing persistent impairment of turnover of brain catecholamines.(1975 !)
Newborn mice were inoculated with attenuated Coxsackie type B4 virus.
Three-to-4-day old mice were infected with yellow fever virus vaccine. A number
of mice survived the acute infections. Some of these demonstrated residual
neurological symptoms, some showed recovery from symptoms while others survived
the infection without revealing symptoms of disease. Determinations of dopamine,
noradrenaline, 5-hydroxytryptamine, homovanillic acid and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic
acid in the inoculated brains indicated an imparied turnover of
neurotransmitters. Subnormal concentrations of catecholamines and homovanillic
acid were encountered in the acutely-infected mice as well as among the
survivors. Failure to synthesize catecholamines was observed not only in mice
demonstrating symptoms of disease or in animals which recovered from their
infection but also among a proportion of the mice which never demonstrated
neurological symptoms. In contrast, 6-week-old Swiss albino mice infected with
West Nile virus showed no effect on the turnover of brain monoamines either in
acutely infected mice or in animals which survived the acute infection. Herpes
simplex virus infection of 3-week-old mice induced during the acute infection an
increased release of neurotransmitters. When these mice were "cured" of the
infection by increasing the environmental temperature the elevated turnover of
monoamine metabolism was normalized. Two months later there were no differences
in concentrations of catecholamines or homovanillic acid between infected animals
or uninfected controls. Thus, persistent impairment of brain monoamine metabolism
was induced in mice infected when very young. The possible importance of the
observations, in particular the findings of an impaired turnover after
subclinical infection, is discussed.
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