Scottish Daily Mail

Woe is sneeze: Now scientists think hay fever could be a key to depression

- By PAT HAGAN

HaY fever sufferers may be four times more likely to develop severe depression, according to new research. But it’s not just a runny nose and itchy eyes that trigger mood slumps.

Scientists think inflammati­on in blood vessels and tissues throughout the body caused by an allergic reaction to pollen has a long-lasting harmful effect on the brain.

This inflammato­ry response — the cause of typical allergy symptoms, such as sneezing — is the body’s way of trying to get rid of an allergy trigger, such as pollen.

But there is a growing body of evidence that sustained exposure to low-level inflammati­on for several months, such as during the hay fever season, could have serious psychiatri­c effects later in life.

However, treatment such as simple ibuprofen could help.

around ten million people a year in Britain suffer during the hay fever season, which peaks during the late spring and summer. Researcher­s are investigat­ing whether inflammati­on can trigger depression, bipolar disorder and schizophre­nia.

most recently, scientists at the national Yang-ming University of Taiwan studied nearly 10,000 teenagers with hay fever and 30,000 without it.

They monitored both groups for almost a decade and recorded how many went on to be diagnosed with bipolar disorder — a condition characteri­sed by periods of mania (when people appear over-excited and have an inability to concentrat­e or sleep) followed by deep depression.

The results, in the Journal of Psychosoma­tic Research, showed that adolescent­s with hay fever were four times more likely to be diagnosed as bipolar as adults.

an earlier Danish study, in 2010, discovered people with allergies such as hay fever had a 30 per cent higher risk of suicide than those who were allergy-free. Researcher­s from aarhus University came up with the findings after comparing allergy rates among suicide victims with those of a group of healthy people.

But how could something as innocuous as a runny nose be linked to mental illness?

Scientists are not completely sure, but it’s already known that during any allergic reaction, the brain churns out substances called pro-inflammato­ry cytokines.

These are proteins that then trigger inflammati­on and the release of chemicals in the blood in a bid to flush out foreign ‘invaders’, such as pollen.

InflammaTi­on develops in order to alert the immune system that the body is under attack. normally, it subsides once the threat is eliminated and the inflamed tissue heals, but problems develop when the inflammati­on does not dampen down.

more recent research also suggests cytokines can cause a dip in the brain’s levels of the so-called happiness chemical serotonin, low levels of which can lead to depression. This could be a vital clue to why allergy-induced inflammati­on leads to psychiatri­c illness.

Researcher­s are investigat­ing whether anti-inflammato­ry drugs, such as ibuprofen, could treat depression.

Earlier this year, King’s College london began the largest-ever investigat­ion into inflammati­on in depressed patients using brains scans.

in the past, inflammato­ry markers have been found in the blood of depressed patients, but this does not prove that inflammati­on is also present in the brain, which is what is thought could cause depressive symptoms.

The scientists will now test if anti-inflammato­ry drugs can help patients who have not responded to antidepres­sants by improving levels of serotonin.

Dr Valeria mondelli, one of the researcher­s, said that because inflammati­on is a natural response, up to a certain level it can protect the brain against infection.

But she added: ‘if it is chronic, then it appears to start to damage brain cells.’

 ??  ?? Tissue: Hay fever affects millions
Tissue: Hay fever affects millions

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