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“Ms. A,” a 60-year-old Kechwa woman from Cuzco, Peru, interviewed in her native language, was in good health until around age 36. Around that time, her husband had become jealous and physically abusive, and she reported that, as a consequence, her head “began to change” (“umaymi variarakapuan”); she saw herself giving away high-value items, including clothing, pots, food, and money, until she was bereft of essentials (“imakunatapas qalata regalayoq kani, mankachaychus kan, hoqkuna munaq, apakuy nini”). She arranged festive gatherings for no particular reason, with food and drink for invited and uninvited guests. She butchered her farm animals (pigs and sheep), prepared food, and went house to house inviting neighbors with food and chicha, an ancestral drink made from fermented corn (“aqhata haywarini, owejata, qhuchiytapas ñak'aruni, mihunata ruwani, wasin wasintan muyuyachimoq karani”). She wandered the streets, feeling extremely happy, and spent all the profits of her business buying unnecessary things. She eventually became very irritable, beating her children and pulling them by their hair (“Wawaykunata maqaroq karani, ch'aqlaruni, chuqchachanmanta chutaruni”); she insulted and yelled at people in the streets without any reason (“P'iñallaña, khamimuq hoqkunata hawapi karani; mana tupayuna, mana rimayuna rikukurani”). She could not stop her thoughts from coming, one after another, without control (“Yuyaymanayniymi, qatichikuspa hamuq, hoqñataq, hoqñataq hamuyurun umayman, manataq chay sayayta atinichu”). She was convinced that she was extremely intelligent, superior, and capable of solving the most difficult problems (“Aswan k'anchasqa yuyayniyoq, ima sasachakuykunata pasq'aq rikukurani”) and that she was very funny and witty, the best at making jokes (“Sinchi chansakuq karani, asichini pitapas, asichispataq, cusillaña karani”). She could not stay on one task; she would start cooking before finishing the laundry, and then leave this task to tend to the animals (“Mana ch'ullallapi churakuyta atinichu, ima ruwasqayta manapuni tukuyta atiranichu”). She had a decreased need for sleep, rising at 1:00 a.m. and knocking at neighbors’ doors (“mana puñuq karani, riqcharuspataq puriyuq karani, punkukunata taqayoq karani”). She was hypersexual (“qarinayaymi sinchipuni karun”). Notably, she considers the initial manic episode as the best period of her life, as she felt very happy. By contrast, she presented to the mental health clinic complaining of deep sadness for insignificant reasons; she cried and felt as if she could not do the simplest home chores (“huchuy cosaskunamanta sinchi llakikuq karani, waqanitaq, mana imachallatapas wasiypi ruwayta atiyman hina karani”). All her manic episodes lasted less than 4 weeks; her first hospitalization occurred at age 41, and since then she has been admitted three more times, for approximately 2 months each time.

Prior to the dissemination of Spanish, the dominant language in the Andean region of South America was Kechwa, which remains the most widely spoken indigenous language in the world. Since Kechwa was not written, much of the existing record of its usage comes through translation by period historians and chroniclers. Much of the traditional medical knowledge has been lost, but current usage frequently retains semantic content with technical implications. Two major reviews of traditional Kechwa medical terminology used to describe psychopathology have been published (1, 2), and one study found substantial overlap between individuals identified by traditional Kechwa healers as suffering from a complex of symptoms referred to as llaqui (see below) and those identified by medical and psychiatric evaluations as suffering from a DSM disorder (3).

A persisting question in Western psychopathology addresses the validity of the distinction between mania, usually associated with better outcomes, and nonaffective psychosis (4, 5). Thus, it seems appropriate to ask if the same distinction can be found in an isolated cultural and historical setting. Early chroniclers provide a description of a common ailment called taqe onqoy, taki onqoy by non-native speakers that seems to correspond to mania. In either case, etymological analysis is informative as to the conceptual framework used by Kechwa speakers to understand this illness, which is associated with increased activity, increased sexual behavior, and expansiveness (1, 2).

Onqoy broadly means disease, and it is usually paired with a modifier implying either its cause or its principal symptoms. When used by itself, onqoy refers to pregnancy and labor. In the case of the disease at hand, taki can be rendered as either dance or song, and the entire phrase would become “singing or dancing illness.” On the other hand, taqe represents the vital force of nature, particularly when it is stored as in a seed, a granary, or even in the womb. Taqe implies also the thrust of the vital force to overcome the boundaries that store it, or to break free. Thus, taqe is the reason seeds germinate, or plants flower and give fruit; it is also the cause of labor and delivery during pregnancy. By extension, taqe also designates the storage or container of such energy (granaries or the womb).

According to chroniclers, taqe onqoy was not considered a form of madness (utiq) (1). Cristóbal de Molina, in 1556, described it as agitation, dancing and falling as if the person were possessed, at times leading to suicidal behavior by jumping against rocks or into mountain rivers. Suicidal behavior in this context was interpreted as a self-sacrifice to the waka, or indwelling sacred spirit of the natural accident (rock or river). Sometimes people affected would describe themselves as under the control of the waka, or as being possessed by it. Also, a person affected by taqe onqoy is said to store an excess of kamay, a word whose meaning is related to the power of creation (including reproduction) and the power to command and to rule. In the most severe cases, taqe onqoy leads to chayapuy or frenzy (1), with elation of mood, hyperactivity, and eventually madness or utiqay (1).

Consistent with the nosological interpretation of the term, Andean people refer to the Pleiades cluster as either Taqe or Onqoy, among other names. The major star in the cluster was the mother of all stars and, as such, was the object of religious devotion and sacrifices (6). Thus, regardless of the variations in usage, taki or taqe onqoy describes a set of behavioral changes associated with the external influence of powerful supernatural entities (the wakas), as well as an exaggerated expression of the power of creation and reproduction, or vital élan, sexual behavior, and birth (7). Yet, Kechwa healers had a clear conception of the morbid nature of these changes in behavior, denoted by the word onqoy (7).

It should be quite apparent, then, that taqe onqoy overlaps with mania. Unlike the Western concept, however, the symptoms in the Andean context are seen as the expression of the vital force overtaking the person from the outside, through the action of a waka. Most notably, despite the association of taqe with pregnancy and seeds, this vital force is thought to affect men and women equally.

As in the case of Ms. A in the case vignette, taqe onqoy commonly alternates with or is followed by llaqui onqoy, a widespread Kechwa illness category representing a broad set of conditions with low mood, low energy, and loss of psychosocial function (3). A study comparing psychiatric diagnosis by a biomedically trained doctor with diagnosis by traditional healers found that over 80% of the patients with llaqui onqoy were identified as depressed (3). Traditional healers used a combination of plant-based remedies (1), rituals, and religious practices to treat mental disorders (7), and many such practices remain in use today. The specific combination of each of these components in traditional Kechwa medicine is not easy to ascertain, but most likely it depended on the skill and preferences of the healer. Health in the Andean world is defined as a state of balance resulting from interaction and reciprocity between the individual and social group, nature, and the gods. Reciprocity is expressed through rituals, commonly “ch'allaku” or a payment of offerings to the divinities. Thus, Ms. A and her family initially sought to improve her symptoms by consulting a traditional healer, “hampeq,” who carried rituals of payment to Mother Earth, “Pachamama Ch'allakuy,” and prescribed infusions made from petals of different Passifloraceae species and ground seashells. When these remedies did not lead to improvement for Ms. A, she decided to consult a “layqa,” or sorcerer, who proposed additional rituals to remove a witch spell. Notably, layqas are consulted usually with malevolent intent or intending to bring harm, injury, or even bad luck to another person, but they are also seen as having the power to counteract or remove harmful spells. Ms. A’s illness progressed, and after her family found her half naked, wandering in the street away from home, they decided to take her to the hospital. Currently Ms. A states that her treatment with lithium is beneficial, but she regrets that it has taken away her “happy and energetic” self, so she still firmly believes that her illness is a product of witchcraft.

The case described and its discussion support the idea that manic-depressive illness can be found in the traditional medical knowledge and practices of the Kechwa of the central Andes of South America. It also highlights “emic” (from phonemics) and “etic” (from phonetics) issues in cultural psychiatry.

The Department of Psychiatry and Neurology, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley School of Medicine, Harlingen (Uscamayta Ayvar, de Erausquin); the Department of Anthropology, National University of San Marcos, Lima, Peru (Sanchez Garrafa); and the Department of Psychiatry, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J. (Escobar).
Send correspondence to Dr. de Erausquin ().
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