Abstract

The relationship between infection with the Borna Disease Virus (BDV) and the clinical symptoms of schizophrenia and mood disorders (DMS-IV) was investigated. Western blotting techniques were used to examine anti-p10-BDV antibodies in serum from 32 patients with schizophrenia and 33 patients with mood disorders in Japan. The results showed that 1 out of 25 controls (4.0%), 7 out of 32 patients with schizophrenia (21.9%) and 9 out of 33 patients with mood disorders (27.3%) were positive for anti-BDV-p10 antibodies. Compared with levels of anti- BDV-p10 antibodies in controls, the production of anti-BDV-p10 antibodies failed to show a statistically significant relationship with schizophrenia but did show a significant relationship with mood disorder. The subgroup of schizophrenia patients with positive syndromes had a non-significantly higher frequency of anti-BDV-p10 antibodies than the subgroup of patients with negative syndromes. Similarly, the production of anti-BDV-p10 antibodies was non-significantly higher among patients with the unipolar subtype of mood disorder than in those with the bipolar subtype.

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