| Literature DB >> 27045220 |
William Coryell, Robert Yolken, Brandon Butcher, Trudy Burns, Lilian Dindo, Janet Schlechte, Chadi Calarge.
Abstract
Latent infection with toxoplasmosis is a prevalent condition that has been linked in animal studies to high-risk behaviors, and in humans, to suicide and suicide attempts. This analysis investigated a relationship between suicide attempt history and toxoplasmosis titers in a group of older adolescents who had recently begun treatment with an SSRI. Of 108 participants, 17 (15.7 %) had a lifetime history of at least one suicide attempt. All were given structured and unstructured diagnostic interviews and provided blood samples. Two individuals (11.9%) with a past suicide attempt, and two (2.1%) without this history, had toxoplasmosis titers ≥ 10 IU/ml (p = 0.166). Those with a past suicide attempt had mean toxoplasmosis titers that were significantly different (p = 0.018) from those of patients who lacked this history. An ROC analysis suggested a lower optimal threshold for distinguishing patients with and without suicide attempts (3.6 IU/ml) than that customarily used to identify seropositivity. Toxoplasmosis titers may quantify a proneness to suicidal behavior in younger individuals being treated with antidepressants.Entities:
Keywords: mood disorder; suicide attempt; toxoplasmosis
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27045220 PMCID: PMC5067776 DOI: 10.1080/13811118.2016.1158677
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Suicide Res ISSN: 1381-1118