What if some of the world’s mental health crises aren’t just psychological in origin, but microbial? In a compelling article published in the Medical Research Archives, Psychiatrist Dr. Robert Bransfield explores how infections can inflame the brain, impair cognition, and even trigger violent behavior. His findings raise profound questions about how diseases may be silently driving both personal and societal instability.

“Encephalopathy is defined as an altered mental state due to a medical disorder,” Bransfield explains, noting that certain pathogens — bacterial, viral, and parasitic — can cause immune effects upon the brain. These immune effects include brain inflammation and autoimmunity that may disrupts mood, memory, and behavior. He focuses particularly on Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacterium associated with Lyme disease, and its role in neuropsychiatric symptoms possibly ranging from brain fog to aggression.