Detection of anti-streptococcal, antienolase, and anti-neural antibodies in subjects with early-onset psychiatric disorders

Authors

  • Humberto Nicolini Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México (UACM); Grupo Medico Carracci; Servicios de Atención Psiquiátrica (SAP)
  • Yaumara López Centro de Neurociencias de Cuba
  • Alma D. Genis-Mendoza Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México (UACM); Servicios de Atención Psiquiátrica (SAP)
  • Viana Manrique Centro de Neurociencias de Cuba
  • Lilia Lopez-Canovas Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México (UACM)
  • Esperanza Niubo Centro de Neurociencias de Cuba
  • Lázaro Hernández Clínica del Adolescente, La Habana, Cuba
  • María A. Bobes Centro de Neurociencias de Cuba
  • Ana M. Riverón Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México (UACM)
  • Mavil López-Casamichana Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México (UACM)
  • Julio Flores Servicios de Atención Psiquiátrica (SAP)
  • Nuria Lanzagorta Grupo Medico Carracci
  • Camilo De la Fuente-Sandoval Instituto Nacional de Neurología (INNMVS)
  • Daniel Santana Grupo Medico Carracci

Keywords:

Anti-neural antibodies, Auto-antibodies, Enolase, Streptococcus, ObsessiveCompulsive Disorder, PANDAS

Abstract

Introduction. Infection with group A Streptococcus (StrepA) can cause post-infectious sequelae, including a spectrum of childhood-onset obsessive-compulsive (OCD) and tic disorders with autoimmune origin (PANDAS, Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal Infections). Until now, no single immunological test has been designed that unequivocally diagnoses these disorders. In this study, we assessed the detection of serum antibodies against human brain enolase (AE), neural tissue (AN) and Streptococcus (AS) as a laboratory tool for the diagnosis of early-onset psychiatric disorders.

Methodology. Serum antibodies against human brain enolase, total brain proteins, and total proteins from StrepA were detected by ELISA in 37 patients with a presumptive diagnosis of PANDAS and in 12 healthy subjects from Mexico and Cuba.

Results. The antibody titers against human brain enolase (AE) and Streptococcal proteins (AS) were higher in patients than in control subjects (t-student, tAE=-2.17, P=0.035; tAS=-2.68, P=0.01, n=12 and 37/group, df=47, significance level 0.05), while the neural antibody titers did not differ between the two groups (P(t)=0.05). The number of subjects (titers> meancontrol + CI95) with simultaneous seropositivity to all three antibodies was higher in the patient group (51.4%) than in the control group (8.3%) group (X2 =5.27, P=0.022, df=1, n=49).

Conclusions. The simultaneous detection of all three of these antibodies could provide valuable information for the etiologic diagnosis of individuals with early-onset obsessivecompulsive disorders associated with streptococcal infection and, consequently, for prescribing suitable therapy.

Published

2015-03-01

How to Cite

Nicolini, Humberto, et al. “Detection of Anti-Streptococcal, Antienolase, and Anti-Neural Antibodies in Subjects With Early-Onset Psychiatric Disorders”. Actas Españolas De Psiquiatría, vol. 43, no. 2, Mar. 2015, pp. 35-41, https://actaspsiquiatria.es/index.php/actas/article/view/104.

Issue

Section

Original