Some sufferers of psychotic illnesses like schizophrenia may have a treatable immune disorder, research suggests.
In a nationwide study, scientists at the University of Oxford found up to one in 11 cases of psychosis may involve a condition where antibodies attack the brain.
The team suggested that all patients displaying signs of psychosis for the first time should be screened for the antibodies to see if alternative treatments may be possible.
The study, published in The Lancet, was led by Professor Belinda Lennox, a clinical psychiatrist at the University of Oxford.
She told the BBC: “The implications of this are that there are patients in mental health services now who will have these antibodies and could potentially be treated in a very different way.
“I think this is a really exciting advance for psychiatry as a whole, and every psychiatrist and patient with psychosis needs to be aware of this and to look for it and treat it assertively when we find it.”
Analysis of blood samples from 228 people found 9% had antibodies that might be relevant to their illness.
Source: The Independent UK