Literature DB >> 11022402

Relation of serum cholesterol, lipid, serotonin and tryptophan levels to severity of depression and to suicide attempts.

L G Almeida-Montes1, V Valles-Sanchez, J Moreno-Aguilar, R A Chavez-Balderas, J A García-Marín, J F Cortés Sotres, G Hheinze-Martin.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine if there is a relation to low serum cholesterol, lipoprotein, serotonin or tryptophan levels in patients with depression who have recently attempted suicide.
DESIGN: Biochemical and behavioural study.
SETTING: Inpatient and outpatient treatment at the Instituto Mexicano de Psiquiatría. PARTICIPANTS: Thirty-three patients with a diagnosis of major depressive episode. Eighteen of these patients had attempted suicide in the month before the start of the study; 15 patients had never attempted suicide. OUTCOME MEASURES: Serum levels of total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL), low-density lipoprotein (LDL), triglycerides, serotonin (5-HT) and tryptophan. Scores on Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Carroll Depression Rating Scale, Beck Hopelessness Scale and Beck Suicide Attempt Severity Scale.
RESULTS: There were no significant differences between patients who had attempted suicide and those who had not in terms of serum cholesterol, HDL, LDL and triglyceride levels. Serum levels of 5-HT and tryptophan were significantly lower in patients with depression who had a recent suicide attempt than in those patients who had never attempted suicide. A comparison of patients not taking antidepressant medication found serum 5-HT levels to be more than 3 times lower in those patients with a recent suicide attempt than in patients with no history of suicide attempt.
CONCLUSIONS: The study found no difference in lipid profiles between patients who had attempted suicide and those who had not. Low serum levels of 5-HT may increase the risk of suicide attempt in patients who are depressed.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11022402      PMCID: PMC1407732     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psychiatry Neurosci        ISSN: 1180-4882            Impact factor:   6.186


  45 in total

1.  Lowering cholesterol concentrations and mortality.

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3.  Serum lipids and depression.

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5.  Lowering cholesterol concentrations and mortality: a quantitative review of primary prevention trials.

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7.  Serum cholesterol concentration and coronary heart disease in population with low cholesterol concentrations.

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8.  Biological heterogeneity of melancholia: results of pattern recognition methods.

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9.  Long-term mortality after 5-year multifactorial primary prevention of cardiovascular diseases in middle-aged men.

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10.  [Plasma levels and membrane transports in red blood cell of tyrosine and tryptophane in depression. Evaluation at baseline and recovery].

Authors:  D Raucoules; J M Azorin; A Barre; R Tissot
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2.  Plasma kynurenine levels are elevated in suicide attempters with major depressive disorder.

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3.  The role of the kynurenine pathway in suicidality in adolescent major depressive disorder.

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4.  Peripheral serotonergic markers in acutely suicidal patients. 1. Comparison of serotonergic platelet measures between suicidal individuals, nonsuicidal patients with major depression and healthy subjects.

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5.  Psychiatric disease and hypercholesterolemia in an urban academic primary care clinic.

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6.  Cholesterol and suicide attempts: a prospective study of depressed inpatients.

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7.  Lipid parameters - significance in patients with endogenous depression.

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Review 8.  Serum lipid levels and suicidality: a meta-analysis of 65 epidemiological studies.

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9.  Cholesterol quandaries: relationship to depression and the suicidal experience.

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10.  The Relationships between Cholesterol and Suicide: An Update.

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