Epidemiological and clinical studies support the view that aggressive acts like suicidal and violent behaviors share a common substrate. Certain aspects of violence in males have been related to high testosterone levels, but the relation of testosterone to attempted suicide has not been studied until now. We estimated plasma levels of testosterone (T), LH, and FSH in 80 male subjects after a suicide attempt and in whom a psychiatric assessment was done during their hospitalization. Suicide intent was evaluated in 72 subjects. A group of 56 healthy males in the same age range served as control. As a group, attempters showed significantly lower T levels, marginally higher LH, and normal FSH compared to controls. The attempters who used violent methods (26 subjects) had T levels even lower than the non-violent (drug overdose) subgroup. Comparisons of T levels of subgroups according to the (main) drug ingested (analgesics, benzodiazepines, antidepressants, neuroleptics, or other drugs) did not reveal any significant drug effect. In relation to diagnosis, the lowest T levels were found in the subgroup with schizophrenia (29 subjects). The T levels of this subgroup were also significantly lower compared to those of a group of 31 male schizophrenic patients, hospitalized and treated with neuroleptics. If the influence of post-attempt stress and medical condition on plasma T could be ruled out, low plasma T may prove to be a biological predictor of attempt, at least in male schizophrenic patients. Nevertheless, the findings differentiate suicidal behavior from other aggressive/violent behaviors and do not support the notion that suicidal and aggressive behaviors are manifestations of the same impulse.
The investigation of biological correlates of suicidal behavior is important in searching for possible changes in neuronal systems activity related to that behavior, so that pharmacological interventions may be proposed, especially in high-risk subjects. In a sample of 111 subjects admitted in a general hospital after suicide attempt, we studied the turnover of neurotransmitters by measuring the urinary output of the main metabolites of serotonin, dopamine and noradrenaline (5-HIAA, HVA, MHPG respectively), as well as serum cholesterol, and compared them to those of a group of 62 healthy controls. Venous blood samples and urine samples were collected within 24 hours of admission. Psychiatric diagnosis was made according to DSM-IIIR criteria and assessment of suicide intent with Beck's Suicidal Intent Scale (SIS). Fifty-four (54) subjects received the diagnosis of adjustment disorder, 25 of depression, 16 of schizophrenia and 16 of personality disorder. Fourteen subjects (14) had employed a violent mode of attempt. Urinary MHPG was found significantly higher in all diagnostic groups compared to controls. No difference was found concerning the excretion of HVA and 5-HIAA. Serum total cholesterol was found significantly lower both in violent and non-violent attempters compared to controls after correcting for age. No difference in serum cholesterol or MHPG was found between violent and non-violent attempts. Serum cholesterol and MHPG correlated negatively, while the correlations between cholesterol and 5-HIAA or HVA were not significant. Our results confirm previous reports of lower serum cholesterol in attempted suicide. They are also indicative of an increased noradrenaline turnover in subjects who attempt suicide, at least within 24 hours after the attempt. Whether this activation precedes or follows the attempt because of the specific stress, can not be answered at present.
The investigation of biological correlates of suicidal behavior is important for identifying high-risk subjects. The objective of this study was to examine the neurochemical variables' platelet MAO activity and urinary MHPG, 5HIAA and HVA, the main metabolites of noradrenaline, serotonin and dopamine, neurotransmitters that are considered to be involved in the pathophysiology of suicidal behavior, as well as plasma cortisol, in a group of subjects with adjustment disorder after a suicide attempt. Fifty-three patients, 42 females and 11 males, were included in the study and were compared to a group of 50 healthy controls, 25 females and 25 males. Platelet MAO activity was found to be significantly lower in both male and female patients compared to controls of the same sex (P < 0. 001 for both comparisons). 5HIAA and HVA were not different between patients and controls, but MHPG was significantly higher in the patients group (P = 0.008). Moreover, plasma levels of cortisol were significantly higher in the patients compared to the controls (P < 0. 001). Our results confirm the hypothesis of low platelet MAO activity as a biological characteristic of patients who attempt suicide. They also point to a possible parallel activation of the noradrenergic system.
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