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Frontolimbic brain volume abnormalities in bipolar disorder with suicide attempts

Authors :
Elizabeth Lippard
Jeffrey A. Welge
Wade Weber
Mbemba Jabbi
Caleb M. Adler
Maxwell J. Tallman
Melissa DellBello
David E. Fleck
Fabiano G. Nery
Stephen M. Strakowski
Austin Gable
Source :
Psychiatry research. 294
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Over 2.3 million people in the United States live with bipolar disorder. Sixty percent of those with a bipolar disorder diagnosis attempt suicide at least once in their lifetime, and up to 19% die by suicide. However, the neurobiology of suicide attempts in bipolar disorder remains unclear. Here, we studied the neuroanatomical basis for suicide attempt history in bipolar disorder by measuring gray matter volumes (GMV) to identify differences in brain-volumes in 121 participants with bipolar disorder type I, and healthy participants (n=40). The bipolar group consisted of individuals with suicide attempt history (n=23) and no suicide attempt history (n=58). All participants completed behavioral/diagnostic assessments and MRI measures of GMV. We focused on a predefined frontolimbic circuitry in bipolar disorder versus (vs.) healthy to first identify diagnostic GMV markers and to specifically identify markers for suicide attempt history. We found reduced GMV markers for bipolar diagnosis (i.e., bipolarHighlightsSuicide is a major health problem especially in bipolar disorder but the neurobiological basis for suicide attempts remains obscure. We identified an anterior cingulate and dorsolateral prefrontal cortical volume correlate for suicide attempt history and suicidal ideation and thereby demonstrates a convergent brain marker for suicidal behaviors.

Details

ISSN :
18727123
Volume :
294
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychiatry research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....98fe3f2f72720d77669317055f1916d9