The British Journal of Psychiatry 143: 69-73 (1983)
© 1983 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Plasma serine to cysteine ratio as a biological marker for psychosis
R Waziri, R Wilson and AD Sherman
In a study of plasma amino acids in psychiatric patients, serine to
cysteine (S/C) ratio was higher (S/C = 1.57 +/- 0.28) in 57 psychotics
compared to 27 nonpsychotics (S/C = 1.06 +/- 0.23). This difference was
highly significant at P less than 0.001. Psychotic patients were given a
psychosis score (p score) of 1-4. The S/C ratios of individual patients
were significantly correlated to their p scores (r = 0.65, P less than
0.001). S/C ratios were not related to diagnosis, age, sex, food intake and
medications. When the initial S/C ratio and p scores of 22 patients were
compared to their S/C ratio and p score at the time when they were improved
and ready to be discharged, there was a concomitant fall both in S/C ratios
and p scores suggesting the high S/C ratios may be indicative of a state
rather than a trait characteristic. Our findings lead us to the conclusion
that S/C ratios may provide a marker for the presence of psychosis and an
index of its severity.