Wallis, C. Reported by Dorfman, A. & Thompson, D. (1987, March 9). Is mental illness inherited? Amish families offer a clue to manic depression. Time.
OVERVIEW
FACTS
- It is strange to find someone among the Amish, known as quiet pacifists, who is deeply depressed and suicidal—Amish have an explanation for a disturbed individual in their community "Siss in blut" meaning in their blood.
- Researcher Janice Egelan, from the University of Miami of Medical School, and a group of scientists, from Yale and M.I.T., confirmed this Amish adage.
- Cases of manic depression in Amish family are linked to human chromosome 11. This study ushers in a new era of psychiatric research.
WHAT IS MANIC DEPRESSION?
- It is also known as bipolar affective disorder.
- It causes victims to oscillate between two extreme emotional states: one, a feeling of grandeur and extravagance, leaving the victim unable to eat or sleep; and the other, a state of loneliness, hopelessness, guilt, and suicidal feelings.
FINDINGS
- Egeland found 32 active cases of manic depression in an Amish community—all proving to have the disease going back several generations.
- When DNA was compared with a member of a family who was mentally ill and a normal member of the same family, discrepancies were found in a region of chromosome 11.
- The conclusion to this finding was "a gene or group of genes in or near this region confers a predisposition to manic depression."
DOES THE SAME GENE DEFECT PLAY A ROLE IN MANIC DEPRESSION?
- Two studies published in Nature found no link between the chromosome 11 and manic depression.
- Still, these two studies do not undermine the discovery of a genetic basis for this ailment.
- It seems that more than one gene may be involved in manic depression.
THE NEXT STEPS FOR SCIENTISTS
- To identify the genes responsible for manic depression.
- To understand the biochemical basis for this disease.
- To find a chemical (medication) that will stabilize the moods.
- To develop tests for diagnosis of people at risk for bipolar disorder to formulate.
IMPLICATIONS
- There is much more to manic depression than we know. We need to refer to the experts in any situation that seems to be beyond normal actions or circumstances.
- There are many manic depressives with whom we associate every day and would never know they have the disease. Medicine does a lot to help people and control this type of depression.
- We need to be aware of manic depression in others and be supportive. The tendency is to think that people are moody or crazy, but, in actuality, it is a physical distress over which they have no control. They need as much acceptance as others with diagnosed diseases such as epilepsy and diabetes.
Anne Montague cCYS