Lewis Wolpert: 'The immune system can have profound effects on thinking
and emotion'
The Independent
, 4 June 2003
I had persuaded myself that depression was related to abnormal
sadness, hence my book, Malignant Sadness. But I now realise that I might
have missed a very important aspect of depression, its relationship to the
immune system. Friends did try to persuade me to take it seriously, but to
no avail. Then I read an article in a leading medical journal that described
the treatment of hepatitis with alpha interferon. I was struck by the fact
that they gave such patients an antidepressant at the same time, for otherwise
there was a high incidence of depression. I contacted the authors in the
USA and they told me that their patients' depression was not related to sadness,
but more to fatigue. They also sent me a review which has persuaded me how
important the immune system may be in depression.
That there is a relationship between physical and psychological
health goes back to the ancient Greeks, but it is only quite recently that
it has been recognised that the immune system can have profound effects
on thinking and emotion. One link is via stress. The stress response is
adaptive in many situations, such as danger, and helps the individual to
deal with the threat. The physiological response involves both hormones
and the nervous system, and makes more energy available. However, this becomes
a danger to health when it remains chronically overactive, and this condition
is frequently found in patients with severe depression.
Stress and depression can affect the immune system, which
is complex, with many interactions between cells such as lymphocytes and
macrophages, those white cells that are at the core of the immune system,
and numerous cytokines, the chemical signals between these and other cells.
Chronic stress can affect the function of lymphocytes and cytokine production,
and a longer time is needed to recover from an infectious disease. Surprisingly,
the same stressors can also activate the immune system.
There is now evidence that depression can both activate and
suppress immune-system function. With immune-system activation, there can
be induction of a state that is called sickness behaviour, which resembles
depression. It is this that underlies the depression caused by giving interferon,
which is itself a cytokine controlling aspects of the immune system. The
similarity of depression with sickness behaviour predicts that those with
illnesses should have higher rates of depression. This is the case.
Increased cytokine levels after birth could account for postnatal
depression. How the cytokines act on the brain to cause depression is not
clear, but they can enter the brain. Stress hormones such as cortisol are
very likely key players, as depression in many is associated with an increase
in the activity of the interactions between the hypothalamus, pituitary
and adrenal glands, which are activated by stress. Increase in cytokines
can stimulate this system, and the normal negative feedback that returns
it after a short while to normal function may be prevented from operating.
There is a further fascinating connection with the placebo
effect. In his new book, Placebo
, Dylan Evans argues that the acute phase response is involved. This response
is a result of some injury and the immune system is activated, moreover
only those illnesses that involve this response are capable of being relieved
by the placebo effect, and they include depression. The complexity of all
these interacting factors is disturbing, but will eventually lead to new
drugs for depression, perhaps acting on the immune system.
Lewis Wolpert is Professor of Biology as Applied to Medicine
at UC
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This page was last updated: 10 June 2003.
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