Research on serotonin and suicidal behavior: neuroendocrine and molecular approaches |
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Authors: | Corrêa Humberto Romano-Silva Marco Aurélio Duval Fabrice Campi-Azevedo Ana Carolina Lima Vivtor Macher Jean-Paul |
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Affiliation: | Departamento de Morfologia, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte-MG, Brazil; Servi?o de Psiquiatria, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte-MG, Brazil. |
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Abstract: | ![]() We carried out two studies to test the hypothesis that altered central serotonergic function, as assessed by lower prolactin (PRL) response to fenfluramine (D-FEN), is more closely associated with suicidal behavior than a particular psychiatric diagnosis. A D-FEN test was performed in 85 major depressed inpatients, 33 schizophrenic inpatients, and 18 healthy controls. We showed that PRL response to D-FEN is a marker of suicidality, regardless of psychiatric disorder. We then examined the association en the serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) receptor 5-HT(2A) gene polymorphism (T102C) and suicide in a sample of Brazilian psychiatric inpatients (95 with schizophrenia, 78 with major depression) and 52 healthy controls. No differences were found in genotypic frequencies across patients and controls. Overall, no differences were found between patients with (n=66) and without (n=107) a history of suicide attempt. We also compared patients with a history of severe suicide attempts (lethality>3; n=32) and patients without such a history (n=107), but they did not exhibit different genotypic frequencies either. These results show thai the 5-HT(2A) gene polymorphism (T102C) may not be involved in the genetic susceptibility to suicidal behavior. |
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Keywords: | serotonin suicidal behavior genetic susceptibility depression schizophrenia |
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