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Journal Article

Citation

Wagner G, Christoph Schultz C, Koch K, Schachtzabel C, Sauer H, Schlösser RG. J. Psychiatr. Res. 2012; 46(11): 1449-1455.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Jena University Hospital, Centre for Neuroimaging, Jahnstr. 3, 07740 Jena, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jpsychires.2012.07.013

PMID

22868048

Abstract

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is associated with an increased risk for suicide. There is considerable evidence that a predisposition to suicidal behavior may exist which is independent of the MDD itself. Recent studies suggest a familial transmission of the diathesis for suicidal behavior, reflected in the observation of suicide aggregation in families and higher rate of suicidal behavior in first-degree relatives of suicide attempters with MDD. One of these transmission factors may be neurobiological alterations. The main goal of the present study was therefore to study abnormalities in cortical thickness in the hypothesized fronto-cingulate network in depressed patients with high risk for suicide. 15 MDD patients with documented own suicidal behavior and/or with suicidal behavior in first-degree relatives (high risk group), 15 depressed patients with non-high risk for suicide and 30 matched healthy controls participated in the study. Using an automated surface based approach (FreeSurfer) structural T1-weighted volumes were analyzed for differences in cortical thickness on a node by node basis covering the entire cortex. Patients with high risk for suicide showed significantly thinner cortex in the left dorsolateral, ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and the anterior cingulate in contrast to non-high risk patients. Together with previous morphometric results of our group, this new finding provides strong evidence for structural brain alterations in depressed patients with high risk for suicide in the fronto-cingulo-striatal network, which is strongly involved in reward processing and behavioral/emotional control. This alteration may constitute the neurobiological basis for an increased predisposition to suicidal behavior.


Language: en

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