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Could PANS Cause Tourette-Like Symptoms In Le Roy High School Students?

  Posted: 02/ 2/2012 4:27 pm

By Karen Schrock
(Click here for the original article)

Over the weekend Erin Brockovich made the news yet again as she and her nonprofit team descended on the village of Le Roy, N.Y., determined to test for environmental toxins that might be giving the town's teenagers symptoms of Tourette's syndrome. She has reportedly been stonewalled thus far by local officials, who have already ruled out toxins as the cause of last October's sudden outbreak of tics and involuntary movements in 12 girls who attend Le Roy Junior–Senior High School. An environmental testing company surveyed the air and water and found nothing amiss, and a local neurologist concluded upon examining the girls that they had "conversion disorder," a catchall moniker for physical symptoms that originate in the mind because of stress, trauma or even mass hysteria.

But many of the affected kids, their parents, concerned locals and outside experts are unhappy with that diagnosis, especially as the number of teens with symptoms has risen to 15 in recent weeks. Some experts think the doctors should revisit the idea that the teenagers might have PANS—pediatric acute-onset neuropsychiatric syndrome.

PANS is a new name for an old idea: that infections by bacteria, viruses or parasites can cause the sudden onset of neuropsychiatric ailments such as Tourette's and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). (Tic disorders like Tourette's are closely related to OCD, sharing many symptoms and often coexisting in patients.) PANS is more commonly known by its former name, PANDAS—pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infection—because the first known cases were in kids who had strep throat and then suddenly developed OCD. But researchers have realized in recent years that a variety of infectious agents—not just strep—can cause mental illness.

New Jersey–based doctor Rosario Trifiletti, who specializes in PANS, visited Le Roy, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) southeast of Rochester, last weekend to take blood and tissue samples from some of the afflicted girls, so he can test for such an infection. The results of those tests will be ready in a couple weeks. In the meantime, OCD expert Michael Jenike, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, explains what PANS is and why it might account for the mysterious illness in Le Roy.

[An edited transcript of the interview follows.]

What is PANDAS, and why is it now called PANS?
It's the sudden onset of a neuropsychiatric disorder: OCD, anorexia or psychosis, cognitive problems. Initially, PANDAS was associated with strep. It turns out that other infections like mycoplasma, certain viruses, Lyme disease—these also produce the same thing. So it's not necessarily associated with strep, and they changed the name to reflect that. Now it's any sudden-onset neuropsychiatric disease.

I've even seen it in old people after they have mono, they suddenly have OCD. I've seen a lot of it after Lyme disease now, too.

How can an infection cause a mental illness?
It's an autoimmune issue. Mady Hornig at Columbia University has a mouse model that shows how it works. They give strep to mice, then give them another agent that breaks down the blood–brain barrier, and that induces a neuropsychiatric syndrome: the mice have trouble running mazes, and so on. Then they purify the antibodies from those mice, inject them in another mouse that never had strep, and that mouse gets the neuropsychiatric symptoms, too. That shows it's the antibodies doing the damage.

[For more on Hornig's studies and the mechanism behind PANS, click here.]

The neurologist treating the Le Roy teenagers ruled out PANDAS early on. As he explained to WGRZ news in Buffalo, he nixed the idea because PANDAS is exceedingly rare and it mostly strikes kids under age 11.
I used to think it was very rare, too. I've work on OCD my whole career, and I couldn't figure out why no one could pin down what was going on with these kids who had had strep. Then the parents got me involved, and I learned a lot more. I now think PANS is extremely common—way, way more common than we thought. I get e-mails from parents every day whose kids have it. I don't think it is rare, is the bottom line.

The problem is, some doctors don't know about it, and some don't even think it exists, so it isn't diagnosed.

As for the age range, I think that the figure usually used is from around two or three years old up to age 14. I don't know why things would dramatically change so that teens could not be susceptible a couple years later. You don't rule people out because of age, especially when it is just a year or two. I see mono causing OCD in people who are 70 or 80.

The neurologist also said he ruled out PANDAS because only one of the girls had a throat infection.
Unless you have a really good medical history, it's easy to miss signs of many of these infections. Parents say no, the kid hasn't been sick, but maybe there was a fever one day that nobody could explain and they forgot about it. Often these infections are very subtle. If strep is in the sinuses, for instance, a throat culture might come back negative. But if you do the blood test and get the patient's antibodies, you can often figure out if there was some sort of infection without symptoms. That's what Trifiletti will be able to do.

Some girls are reported to be getting better on their own. Is that consistent with PANS?
Yep, sometimes that happens, there's a very variable course.

What else makes you think these cases could be PANS?
I saw a couple of the Le Roy girls on TV this morning. It looked like they were displaying Sydenham's chorea, with involuntary arm and hand movements. It looks very weird to the untrained eye, like something they are doing on purpose. You can look it up on YouTube, and you'll see patients making similar movements to what these girls are exhibiting. I think that's pretty revealing. In the 1990s Susan Swedo at the National Institute of Mental Health was studying Sydenham's chorea and she made a link between it and OCD. Then she noticed a kind of sudden onset OCD that seemed to be associated with strep throat, and coined the term PANDAS.

So if does turn out to be PANS, what will the treatment be?
There are many approaches. The simplest thing is to use antibiotics. You'd probably do a three- or a six-week course. That works for a lot of kids. If it doesn't work, there are alternatives like steroids or IVIG [intravenous immunoglobulin, derived from human donor blood and used to treat autoimmune diseases].

We need more studies to figure out the best treatments. I'm starting an antibiotic study now with my [Massachusetts General Hospital] colleague Dan Geller, because there are no good studies of antibiotics for PANS.

Any final thoughts about this case in Le Roy—the fact that all these teens came down with tics at the same time?
It's very weird. Usually I don't think you get outbreaks very often of things like PANS, where you have a whole group of kids get it. However, if there is strep or something going around a school, it's possible that this might happen more than you think. Some kids might stay home from school from awhile, maybe see psychiatrists in private—it's under the table, it doesn't get out there and people don't put it all together.

I just can't imagine that it's conversion or mass hysteria; that diagnosis doesn't mean much. It's a name people stick on things when they don't understand what's going on. Some psychiatrists like these names, thinking if you give something a name it sometimes helps people, but I find it just confuses the issue.

This case really forces the issue. Whether it's the toxins or PANDAS or whatever, I think we will learn a lot from it.

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09:53 AM on 02/03/2012
Poor mice......................
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bluecatb
08:16 AM on 02/03/2012
Perhaps the answer is contained in this. It's very possible the rich hate the poor enough they are trying to use a natural need like eating to do so.

http://www.naturalnews.com/034847_Michael_Taylor_Monsanto_FDA.html

Time to take OUR power back from corporate "FRANKENFOOD MONOPOLIES OF DEATH."

WE the people as parents, sisters, brothers grandparents, have work to do at our supermarket chains.

WE demand FOOD IS NOT POLITICAL, IDEOLOGICAL, OR ANYBODY'S "BUSINESS."
FOOD MUST BE GAURDED FOR PURITY OF NUTRIENTS AND NOT ALLOW THE CORPORATIONS TO CHISEL THE RATES OF VITAMINS BY THE DOLLAR, OR SEPARATED FROM IT'S NATURAL ENTRANCE, INTO OUR FAMILIES STOMACHS.

SLOW POISONING TO REDUCE THE POPULATION, VIA THE REPUBLICAN ELITE LEADERSHIP OF 30 YEARS.

READ IT AND WEEP FOR THE COUNTRY'S MORALS, WHILE STRENGTHENING YOUR ARM FOR ELECTION DAY TO VOTE THESE CORPORATE SHILLS OUT OF OUR KITCHEN CABINETS.
THEY ARE SO BAD, THEY WON'T EVEN LABEL THE PRODUCT, JUST SNEAKING IT IN. EVERYTHING THAT CHILDREN, ELDERLY AND YOUTH LIKE BLEACHED WHITE SUGAR AND OTHERS CONTAMINATED.
RIGHT NOW FLORIDA HAS DOZENS OF 3 STORY TANKS OF CONTAMINATED ORANGE JUICE WITH A FUNGUCIDE IN IT. SOLD OUT FDA, SAYS IT'S OKAY, SO WE SHOULD TRUST MORE BUSHEVIKS WHO LIVE FOR THE DOLLAR?
NOT!!
READ IT OR RISK YOUR OWN LIFE AND YOUR CHILDREN'S LIVES FOR NOT DOING SOMETHING ABOUT IT.

EUROPEAN CITIZENS THREW THEM OUT OF FOOD PUBLIC CONTRACTS.

WHY IS AMERICA SO DARN DUMBED DOWN?
.
12:25 AM on 02/03/2012
400 years ago, a bunch of little girls in Salem exhibited the same symptoms...
12:30 AM on 02/03/2012
Hmmmmmm So I guess we could round up these girls in NY state and execute them as witches. That would certainly put a stop to their symptoms.
12:34 AM on 02/03/2012
Nooo...I was thinking maybe it's psychological in both cases. Your mind went to pitchforks and torches.
12:02 AM on 02/03/2012
I know this sounds crazy, but these symptoms sound like the little girls in Salem Village, that preceded the witch trials.
11:49 PM on 02/02/2012
These 15 girls and notice they are ALL GIRLS are doing it for the attention. There is nothing wrong with any of them.
11:53 PM on 02/02/2012
Thank you, doctor. Which medical school did you graduate from?
11:56 PM on 02/02/2012
For decades people thought that stomach ulcers were caused by stress, and didn't believe there was a real medical cause. But lo and behold, turns out that ulcers were caused by a bacterium. "Common sense" was wrong. And the "stress" theory was held by a lot of doctors, to boot.

So it is premature to say the least that there is not some environmental or bacterial or viral cause for this.
collectsrocks
It's good to be good & nice to be nice
06:59 PM on 02/02/2012
Many years ago in my early 30s I suddenly had difficulty holding onto things and dropped stuff all the time. Also my legs would just give out unexpectedly. The next symptom was, I began saying sentances backward, which made no sense to anyone. A chiropractor friend told me I should see my doctor and ask for a strep blood test. Sure enough I had strep which didn't show up on a throat swab. I was put on antibiotics for a month and was then back to myself with all symptoms gone. I think the doctor in the article might be on to something with his idea the girls had or have strep.
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mercurial123
06:40 PM on 02/02/2012
this is a bunch of girls seeking attention!
06:08 PM on 02/02/2012
Saw a TV show (Mystery Diagnosis) on this past weekend. Some kid named Timothy had this. It was very unusual but seemed to totally make sense once it was explained. If these were my kids I would got them on antibiotics right away. I would not take a "metal illness" diagnosis for something that came on so suddenly and is exhibited in others as well.
photo
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C Karen Stopford
05:51 PM on 02/02/2012
" Then they purify the antibodies from those mice, inject them in another mouse that never had strep, and that mouse gets the neuropsychiatric symptoms, too." And yet you insist that vaccinations couldn't possibly be behind the huge increase in autism spectrum disorder, ADHD, etc.... am I the only one to detect the apparent paradox here?
lofttypeofaview
Glad I don't have Republican Stockholm Syndrome!
08:34 PM on 02/02/2012
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome is also linked to Flu Vaccinations. I have had Chronic Fatigue Syndrome for the last 17 years. I had had vaccinations but also had had the flu so intensely that I vomited for ten days straight and had to be hospitalized. I haven't gotten a vaccination since and have also never gotten the flu again either.
11:49 PM on 02/02/2012
How's this, take a freakin NAP.
11:57 PM on 02/02/2012
Not a fair anology. They injected ANTIBODIES from one mouse into another mouse. They did not give them a vaccination.

A vaccine consists of an ANTIGEN (live, modified, or killed) which causes the natural defense system of the body to produce it's own immunity to further infection from the agent in question.
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bluecatb
08:39 AM on 02/03/2012
The hope is the whte blood cells reproduced from the immune system that battled the disease, would be reproduced enough to stop the disease and reverse it. Ergo the vaccine is actually the white blood cell immunities that have survived the battle and reproduced to battle in another body. Playing around with genetics is a very touchy business and shouldn't be handled by corporate elite pharmaceutical phychos with stock in the cures. These congress critters convincing public to get vaccinated or their children exposed, for a higher stock portfolio for retirement, at OUR health's expense. They also are monopolized to the point they are connected to the "for profit health industry corp, which drizzles out medicines and plecebos at will. Sometimes without the patient knowing they are only placebo, if they suspect it mental.

TRICKSTERS SHOULDN'T BE IN OUR MEDICINE PRODUCTIONS OR SALES.