Neuroimmunology of Major Psychiatric Disorders
A special issue of Brain Sciences (ISSN 2076-3425).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (20 April 2020) | Viewed by 7656
Special Issue Editor
(2) University Psychiatric Hospital Antwerp, Campus Duffel, 2570 Duffel, Belgium
Interests: Immune; kynurenine pathway; mood disorders; schizophrenia
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Over the past two decades, evidence has accumulated pointing towards the involvement of the immune-inflammatory system in the pathophysiology of several major psychiatric disorders, including mood and psychotic disorders. Abnormalities in peripheral (cytokines, kynurenines) and central (microglial activation patterns) immune markers have been demonstrated, and were shown to be predictive of poor clinical outcome. Other diseases accompanied by proinflammatory cytokine production profiles (i.e., auto-immune disease, cancer, cardiovascular disease) have been demonstrated to increase the risk for these major psychiatric disorders. More recent insights have revealed the potential involvement of oxidative and nitrosative stress and other cytotoxic markers. These complex interactions may drive the neurodegeneration seen in the more severe psychiatric illnesses.
Yet, many important research questions remain open in this field, hampering our understanding of the role of the immune system in the onset and course of these psychiatric illnesses. For instance: How are immune deficiencies related to oxidative and nitrosative stress in major psychiatric illnesses? Are immune abnormalities a driving factor in the higher co-morbidities between psychiatric illnesses on one hand and metabolic or other somatic syndromes on the other? Is there ‘an immune subtype’ in depressive and psychotic disorders? What is the predictive value of immune markers towards treatment outcome and towards psychosocial functioning? Which new methodologies may further our insights in the field of immunopsychiatry? These are some of the important questions we would like to ask in this Special Issue.
Prof. Dr. Manuel Morrens
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- cytokines
- immune
- immunopsychiatry
- kynurenines
- major depressive disorder
- microglia
- oxidative stress
- schizophrenia
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