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Blood Tests Diagnose Mental Health Conditions

By Biotechdaily staff writers
Posted on 13 Mar 2007
Blood tests are being developed for panic disorder and other mental health conditions.

The findings of University of Iowa (UI; Iowa City, IA, USA) investigators were based on the analysis of genetic information in immature white blood cells and appear online in the March 6, 2007, American Journal of Medical Genetics.

The ability to test for panic disorder is a quantum leap in psychiatry, said the study's lead author, Robert Philibert, M.D., Ph.D., professor of psychiatry in the UI Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine. Panic disorder will no longer be a purely descriptive diagnosis, but, as with cystic fibrosis, Down syndrome, and other conditions, a diagnosis based on genetic information, he said. In addition, the finding could help us better understand the pathways that initiate, promote, and maintain panic disorder.

The team compared gene expression in lymphoblasts (immature white blood cells) culled from 16 participants with panic disorder and 17 participants without the disorder. The study found many genes were more expressed in people with panic disorder than in people without the condition. Similarly, the study found many genes were less expressed in people with panic disorder. There were also sex-related differences.

Overall, people with panic disorder had noticeably different patterns of gene expression than people without the disorder. Although panic disorder is a disease of brain cells, the study used lymphoblasts as stand-ins for the genetic testing because brain cells are not accessible or easily tested.

Panic attacks can involve up to 10 symptoms, including palpitations, shortness of breath, sweating, and a feeling of loss of control or dying--symptoms that are very similar to heart attack symptoms. People with panic disorder often end up in the emergency room for heart tests when in fact they have panic disorder. This is just one of the reasons that it would be helpful to have a blood test for panic disorder, Dr. Philibert said. If we can, it could help us identify systems that interact with the environment and possibly lead the way to new, even non-drug, therapies to prevent illness,

A blood test for commercial use is now being developed by the UI, which raises larger questions about how information revealed by such tests will be used. The issue of patient medical records and how they can potentially be used by employers, insurers, government agencies, and other institutions is a concern, according to Prof. Philibert.



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