| Literature DB >> 30386264 |
Carmen Domínguez-Baleón1, Luis F Gutiérrez-Mondragón1, Adrián I Campos-González2,3, Miguel E Rentería2,3.
Abstract
Background: With around 800,000 people taking their own lives every year, suicide is a growing health concern. Understanding the factors that underlie suicidality and identifying specific variables associated with increased risk is paramount for increasing our understanding of suicide etiology. Neuroimaging methods that enable the investigation of structural and functional brain markers in vivo are a promising tool in suicide research. Although a number of studies in clinical samples have been published to date, evidence about neuroimaging correlates for suicidality remains controversial. Objective: Patients with mental disorders have an increased risk for both suicidal behavior and non-suicidal self-injury. This manuscript aims to present an up-to-date overview of the literature on potential neuroimaging markers associated with SB and NSSI in clinical samples. We sought to identify consistently reported structural changes associated with suicidal symptoms within and across psychiatric disorders.Entities:
Keywords: bipolar disorder; depression; neuroimaging; psychiatric patients; schizophrenia; self-harm; suicide attempt
Year: 2018 PMID: 30386264 PMCID: PMC6198177 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00500
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Keywords used to query the bibliographic databases.
| Self-harm, suicide, suicide attempt, suicidal behavior, suicidal ideation, self-mutilation, self-injury, self-poisoning. | Magnetic-resonance imaging, MRI, brain imaging, neuroimaging. | Psychiatry, psychiatric patients, mental disorder, mental health, psychiatric diagnosis, depression, mdd, major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, post-traumatic stress disorder, ptsd, alcohol use disorder, substance use disorder, cannabis, alcoholism, borderline personality disorder, anxiety, alcohol abuse, anxiety disorders, eating disorders. |
Figure 1General overview of the methodology. Flow diagram depicting database sources and the steps performed for this systematic review.
Main characteristics of articles regarding Major Depressive Disorder and Suicide.
| Gosnell et al. ( | USA | 28 F/32 M | MDD suicidal attempt:28.9 (9.98), MDD no suicidal attempt:29.25 (11.1), healthy controls:28.9 (10.0) | Cortical lobes (Frontal, temporal, parietal, occipital), corpus callosum, thalamus, insula, limbic structures, basal ganglia, hippocampus, amygdala. | T1-weighted images on a 3T Siemens Trio MR scanner. | C-SSRS, PHQ, WHOA, DSM-IV | Reduction in right hippocampal volume of the suicidal group compared to healthy controls and frontal and temporal lobe volumes of the suicidal group were diminished compared to the depressed patients. | |
| Colle et al. ( | France | ~50% F/M | MDD no suicidal attempt: 47.7(12.6), MDD suicidal attempt: 44.2(11.9). Past:47.6(13.4), Acute: 40.2(13.4) | Hippocampal volume. | 1.5 or 3-T Philips scanner, SPM5 processing | Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) >17, DSM-IVTR. | Depressed patients with a history of suicide attempts had smaller hippocampus than depressed patients without such a history. (TV) | |
| Taylor et al. ( | USA | 108 F/57 M | MDD no suicidal: 37.5 (8.9), MDD suicidal: 33.5 (9.1), healthy controls: 29.9 (9.1) | Regional white and gray matter volumes, cortical thickness. Orbitofrontal cortex, cingulate cortex, insula, amygdala, parahippocampus, thalamus and basal ganglia. | Sagittal T1-weighted FreeSurfer processing | DSM-IV, Montgomery–Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) >15 | Depressed group with thoughts of death did exhibit reduced cortical thickness in the left frontal, temporal, parietal regions and the insula but not in regional GMV when compared to the group without thoughts of death. | |
| Peng et al. ( | China | 38 F/28 M | MDD suicidal attempt: 27.75(7.21), MDD no suicidal attempt: 31.06 (7.39), healthy controls: 28.61(5.45) | Gray matter volume of the limbic cingulate gyrus, the middle temporal gyrus, the parietal region and the insula. | Philips 3 T, T1-weighted 3D SPM8 processing | Hamilton Depressive Rating Scale (HDRS), DSM-IV, Zung's Self-Rating Depression Scale (SDS). | Patients with a suicide history showed significantly decreased GMV in the right middle temporal gyrus and increased GMV in the right parietal lobe when each group was compared to healthy controls. The suicidal group had a decreased GMV in left limbic cingulate gyrus compared to the non-suicidal group. | |
| Dombrovski et al. ( | USA | 30 F/22 M | MDD suicidal attempt: 66.0 (6.4), MDD no suicidal: 67.7 (7.0), healthy controls: 70.5 (7.5) | Basal ganglia gray matter integrity. | T1-weighted images, automated labeling pathway (ALP) processing | SCID/DSM-IV, HDRS-17 | Suicide Attempters had lower putamen gray matter voxel counts and lower voxel counts in associative and ventral striatum. | |
| Wagner et al. ( | Germany | 50 F/10 M | MDD high-risk for suicide: 41.0 (12.5), MDD low-Risk for suicide: 34.1 (10.5), healthy controls: 35.1(10.4) | Cortical thickness, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC) | 1.5T Siemens scanner, T1-weighted images, FreeSurfer processing | DSM-IV diagnosis, 18 on the 21-item HDRS | Patients with depression and a high risk for suicide had a substantially thinner cortex in the left DLPFC, VLPFC and the anterior cingulate when compared against non-high risk patients. | |
| Cyprien et al. ( | France | 222 F/213 M | MDD suicidal attempt: 72.2 (4.3), MDD no suicidal attempt: 71 (3.8), healthy controls: 71 (3.8) | Corpus Callosum volume | T1-weighted imaging, Analyze 9.0 processing | MINI/DSM-IV criteria, Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression scale (CES-D) | The area of the posterior third of corpus callosum was significantly smaller in suicide attempters than in affective controls and healthy individuals. | |
| Wagner et al. ( | Germany | 50 F/10 M | MDD High-risk: 41.0 (12.5), MDD Low-risk: 34.1(10.5), Controls: 35.1 (10.4) | Regional Gray Matter density | Sagittal T1-weighted SPM2 processing | DSM-IV, 18 on the 21-item HDRS | Depressed individuals with higher risk for suicide presented diminished gray matter density in a fronto-striato-limbic network in comparison to healthy controls and in caudate and rostral anterior cingulate cortex when compared to non-high risk patients. | |
| Hwang et al. ( | Taiwan | All Male | MDD suicidal attempt: 79.1(5.6), MDD no suicidal attempt: 79.6 (5.1), healthy controls: 79.5 (4.3) | Regional volumes. GM (insula, posterior cingulate) WM (subcallosal cingulate cortex, floor of lateral ventricles, parahippocampal region, insula, cerebellum). | Siamens 2T T1-weighted imaging, SPM2 processing | 17 on the 21-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS), DSM-IV | Suicidal depression was associated with decreased gray matter and white matter volume in the frontal, parietal and temporal lobes, and the insula, lentiform nucleus, midbrain, and cerebellum when compared with non-suicidal individuals. | |
| Pompili et al. ( | Italy | 57 F/42 M | No suicidal attempt:47.27 (14.54), Suicidal attempt: 45.57 (16.10) | Total White Matter Hyperintensities | T1 & T2-weighted images | DSM-IV-TR diagnosis of major affective disorders (MDD, BIP type I, BIP type II, subst. Abuse), MINI/DSM-IV-TR. | The presence of periventricular white matter hyperintensities was robustly associated with | |
| Monkul et al. ( | USA | All Female | Suicidal: 31.4 (13.9), Non Suicidal: 36.5 (7.5), Healthy controls: 31.3 (8.3) | Regional GM and WM volumes (orbitofrontal cortex, cingulate, amygdala and hippocampus) | 1.5T GE Signa Imaging. Signa 5.4.3 software | Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID). (HDRS). | Suicidal depressed patients showed a smaller GMV in the right and left orbitofrontal cortex compared with healthy subjects. Suicidal patients presented larger right amygdala volumes when compared to non-suicidal patients. | |
| Pompili et al. ( | Italy | 41 F/24 M | MDD suicidal attempt: 42.17(13.51) MDD no suicidal attempt: 44.61 (13.95) | White Matter Hyperintensities | Axial and coronal T2-weighted Axial and Sagittal T1-weighted | MDD, BIP MINI/DSM-IV diagnosis | The prevalence of white matter hyperintensities was significantly higher in subjects with | |
| Ehrlich et al. ( | USA | 68 F/34 M | 26.7(5.5) | White matter hyperintensities | T2-weighted | DSM-IV diagnosis. | The prevalence of periventricular white matter hyperintensities was significantly higher in subjects with | |
| Ehrlich et al. ( | USA | 41 F/112 M | Psychosis: 16.0(3.3), BIP: 14.9 (3.5), Depression: 15.1(2.8) | White matter hyperintensities | T2-weighted | DSM-IV diagnosis | White matter hyperintensities were significantly associated with a higher prevalence of | |
| Ahearn et al. ( | USA | 34 F/6 M | MDD suicidal attempt: 66.0 (5.8), MDD no suicide attempt: 66.4 (5.7) | Gray matter hyperintensities | 1.5 T and T2 weighted imaging | The Hamilton Depression Scale (HDRS) | Unipolar patients with a history of a | |
| Lee et al. ( | South Korea | 20 F/18 M | MDD suicidal attempt: 41.95 (10.81), MDD no suicidal attempt: 41.11 (15.15) | Regional gray matter volume differences. | T1-weighted imaging, SPM8 processing | DSM-IV, HDRS | Compared with suicide non-attempters, | |
| Sachs-Ericsson et al. ( | USA | 190F/55M | MDD suicidal attempt: 66.74 (6.6), MDD no suicidal attempt: 69.8 (7.5) | White matter lesions (WML) | 1.5 T imaging MrX processing | MontgomeryeAsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), DSM-IV, MMSE, DIS. | Higher baseline WML in left hemisphere. |
Cortical phenotypes associated with SB across disorders.
| MDD Wagner et al. ( | Reduction DLPFC and VLPFC CT | Reduction anterior CT | ||||||
| MDD Peng et al. ( | Increase right GM | Reduction left limbic GM | ||||||
| MDD Wagner et al. ( | Reduction GM | Reduction anterior, rostral and dorsal GM | ||||||
| MDD Taylor et al. ( | Reduction CT | Reduction left CT | Reduction CT | Reduction left CT | ||||
| MDD Gosnell et al. ( | Reduction CV | Reduction CV | ||||||
| MDD Hwang et al. ( | Reduction GM, WM | Reduction GM, WM | Reduction GM | Reduction GM | ||||
| MDD Monkul et al. ( | Reduction GM | |||||||
| MDD Duarte et al. ( | Increase GM | Increase GM | Increase GM | |||||
| BD Johnston et al. ( | Reduction GM | |||||||
| BD Lijffijt et al. ( | Reduction GM | |||||||
| BP-P Giakoumatos et al. ( | Reduction fusiform gyri bilaterian inferior and superior GM | |||||||
| SCZ Besteher et al. ( | Reduction CT | Reduction CT | Reduction CT | Reduction left superior CT | Reduction CT | Reduction CT | Reduction right caudal anterior CT | Reduction CT |
| SCZ Giakoumatos et al. ( | Reduction GM | Reduction GM | Reduction inferior GM | Reduction right cuneus, pericalcarine GM | Reduction right GM | |||
| SCZ Aguilar et al. ( | Reduction GM | Reduction left superior GM | ||||||
| SCZ Rusch et al. ( | Increase WM | Increase WM | ||||||
| BPD Soloff et al. ( | Reduction bilateral middle inferior GM | Reduction fusiform gyrus, bilateral middle superior GM | Reduction lingual gyrus GM | Reduction left anterior GM | Reduction right GM | |||
| BPD Soloff et al. ( | Reduction right middle inferior GM | Reduction fusiform gyrus, right middle superior gyrus GM | Reduction left lingual gyrus GM | Reduction right and left GM | ||||
| BDP Goodman et al. ( | Reduction CV |
CT, Cortical thickness; CV, Cortical volume; GM, Gray matter volume; WM, White matter volume.
Figure 2Database source of articles included in this systematic review. Venn diagram illustrating the overlap between studies obtained from different databases.
Main characteristics of articles regarding Borderline Personality Disorder and Suicide.
| Soloff et al. ( | USA | 41 F/10 M | BPD High lethality attempers: 36.1 (9.2), BPD Low lethality attempers: 27.4 (5.9) | Regional GM volumes mid-inf. orbital frontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, middle-superior temporal cortex, insula, hippocampus, parahippocampus, fusiform gyrus, lingual gyrus and amygdala | 1.5T Signa Imaging, Sagittal T1-weighted, (DARTEL) in SPM8 processing | DSMIII-R or DSM-IV (SCID), Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines (DIB). | High lethality attempters had diminished GMV in right midsupperior temporal gyrus, right middle inferior orbitofrontal gyrus, right insular cortex, left fusiform gyrus, left lingual gyrus and right parahippocampal gyrus compared to low lethality attempters. | |
| Soloff et al. ( | USA | 76 F/44 M | BPD: 28.3 (7.5), Healthy controls: 25.9 (7.2) | Regional GM concentrations mid-inf. orbitofrontal cortex, mid-sup temporal cortex, anterior cingulate, insula, hippocampus, amygdala, fusiform, lingual and parahippocampal gyri | 1.5T Sign, Sagittal T1-weightes imaging, SPM5 processing | DSMIII-R or DSM-IV (SCID), DIB. | BPD attempters had diminished gray matter volumes in the insula, the left hemisphere, the middle superior temporal cortex, the right hemisphere, hippocampus, fusiform gyrus, parahippocampus, anterior cingulate and amigdala when compared to healthy controls. | |
| Goodman et al. ( | USA | 20 F/6 M | BPD: 15.8 (1.1), Healthy controls: 16.2 (0.8) | Gray and white matter volume in the prefrontal cortex | T1-weighted MP-RAGE | DSM-IV, DIB, BDI. | Number of suicide attempts was positively associated with smaller overall Brodmann area 24 (ACC) volume. |
Main characteristics of articles regarding other affective disorders and suicide.
| Kim et al. ( | Korea | 23 F/13 M | Panic Disorder suicidal attempt: 33.42 (14.09), Panic Disorder no suicidal attempt: 34.00 (9.38) | Gray Matter and White Matter volumes | 3D T1-FSPGR imaging. SPM5 processing | DSM-IV/SCID. | The VBM analysis revealed no significant intergroup difference in the GM and WM volumes. | |
| Thomas et al. ( | USA | 93 F/89 M | PTSD: 11.74 (2.4), Healthy Controls: 11.74 (2.7) | Pituitary volumes | T2-weighted images (GE 1.5- Tesla Unit) | DSM-IV | PTSD subjects with a history of suicidal ideation had larger pituitary volumes than healthy controls. |
Figure 3Risk of bias assessment. Stacked bars representing the percentage of literature papers identified at a high, medium, low, or unknown risk of bias for specific possible sources of bias. AffD, affective disorder; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; HC, healthy controls.
Subcortical phenotypes associated with SB across disorders.
| MDD Monkul et al. ( | Increase GM | ||||||||||
| MDD Wagner et al. ( | No difference | Decrease GM | Decrease GM | ||||||||
| MDD Hwang et al. ( | Decrease GM | Decrease GM | Decrease GM WM | ||||||||
| MDD Cyprien et al. ( | Decrease CV | ||||||||||
| MDD Gosnell et al. ( | No difference | Decrease CV | |||||||||
| MDD Colle et al. ( | Decrease CV | ||||||||||
| MDD Dombrovski et al. ( | Decrease GM | ||||||||||
| MDD Lee et al. ( | Decrease GM | ||||||||||
| BIP Johnston et al. ( | No difference | Decrease GM | Decrease GM | ||||||||
| BIP Baldacara et al. ( | No difference | ||||||||||
| SCZ Spoletini et al. ( | Increase CV | ||||||||||
| SCZ Giakoumatos et al. ( | Decrease GM | ||||||||||
| BPD Soloff et al. ( | Decrease left GM | Decrease GM | |||||||||
| BPD Soloff et al. ( | No difference | Decrease GM |
CT, cortical thickness; CV, cortical volume, GM, gray matter volume; WM, white matter volume.
Main characteristics of articles regarding Bipolar Disorder and Suicide.
| Johnston et al. ( | USA | 69 F/44 M | BIP suicidal attempt: 20.5 (3.0), BIP no suicidal attempt: 20.5 (3.0), healthy controls: 20.8 (3.3) | Regional Gray matter volumes | Sagittal, T1-weighted, SPM5 processing | DSM-IV criteria | ||
| Lijffijt et al. ( | USA | All Female | BIP suicidal attempt: 36.6 (10.7), BIP no suicidal attempt:41.1 (11.3) | Prefrontal cortex gray matter volume | High resolution 3-D T1-weighted, 1.5-Tesla Intera scanner | DSM-IV(SCID, HDRS, (Young Mania Rating Scale) YMRS. | PFCGM (prefrontal cortex gray matter) volume was lower in patients with than without | |
| Nery-Fernandes et al. ( | Brazilian | 41 F/21 M | BIP suicidal: 39.8(11.4), BIP non-suicidal: 42.0(8.6), Healthy controls: 37.7(13.5) | Corpus callosum sub-region area: (rostrum, genu, rostral body, anterior midbody, posterior midbody,isthmus, and splenium). | 1.5T Sigma Imaging, ANALYZE AVW processing | DSM-IV axis I (SCID-I), HDRS, YMRS. | No differences were observed for any subregion between Bipolar-Suicidal and Bipolar-Non Suicidal groups. There was a significant reduction in the genu and isthmus areas in bipolar patients compared with HC. | |
| Baldaçara et al. ( | Brazilian | 41 F/21 M | BIP suicidal attempt:39.94 (11.12), BIP no suicidal attempt: 41.9 (8.9), Healthy controls:37.72 (13.63) | Cerebellar volume | Sagittal T1, 1.5T Symphony Master/Class Siemens | SCID-I, HDRS, YMRS. | No volumetric differences were found between the BIP subjects with | |
| Matsuo et al. ( | USA | All Female | BIP suicidal: 36.2 (10.1), BIP non suicidal: 44.2 (12.5), Healthy controls: 36.9 (13.8) | Corpus Callosum genu, anterior body, posterior body, isthmus and splenium areas | Philips 1.5 T, Axial 3D T1 weighted | DSM-IV/SCID, HDRS, YMRS. | No significant differences among the three groups on any regional CC areas, although the suicidal BIP patients had the smallest areas. | |
| Duarte et al. ( | Brazillian | 34 F/25 M | BIP suicidal attempt: 41.1(12.64), BIP no suicidal attempt: 42.26 (11.70), Healthy controls: 37.40 (10.20) | Whole brain exploratory. Hypothesis driven: OFC (superior lateral, middle lateral, inferior lateral and medial); dorsal lateral PFC (DLPFC) (inferior, middle and superior frontal gyri); ACC; amygdala; hippocampus; insula; and thalamus. | Philips 1.5 T 3D T1 weighted | DSM-IV-TR, MINI-PLUS, HDRS | Attempters showed an increase in GMV in the rostral anterior cingulate cortex, insula and orbitofrontal cortex when compared to non-attempters. |
Main characteristics of articles regarding Schizophrenia and Suicide.
| Besteher et al. ( | Germany | 46 F/41 M | SCZ suicidal attempts: 34.4 (12.1), SCZ no suicidal attempts:28.8 (9.7), Healthy controls:29.5 (7.9). | Cortical thickness (CT) | T1-weighted imaging on 1.5-T Siemens. FreeSurfer processing. | DSM-IV | Suicide attempters had cortical thinning in the bilateral caudal middle frontal gyrus, lateral orbitofrontal and superior frontal gyrus, left pars orbitalis and right caudal ACC, pars opercularis and triangularis when compared with healthy controls. | |
| Giakoumatos ( | USA | 387 F/364 M | SCZ no suicidal attempt: 35.9(13.3). SCZ suicidal attempt lethality; High:35.6(11.7), Low:36.9(12.2), Healthy controls:38.1(12.5) | Regional Gray matter volume in temporal, parietal, frontal regions. | High-resolution isotropic T1-weighted imaging, FreeSurfer analysis | DSM-IV-TR/SCID | Attempters had significantly less GMV in bilateral inferior temporal and superior temporal cortices, left superior parietal, thalamus and supramarginal regions, right insula, superior frontal and rostral middle frontal regions when compared to non-attempters. | |
| Spoletini et al. ( | Italy | 45 F/55 M | SCZ suicidal attempt: 42.9 (11.3), SCZ no suicidal attempt: 39.8 (11.4), Healthy controls: 40.0 (16.6) | Volumetric data of lateral ventricles, thalamus, hippocampus, amygdala, caudate, putamen, pallidum and accumbens | 3D T1-weighted, T2-weighted FSL 4.1 software for processing | DSM-IV-TR, MMSE | An increased volume in the right amygdala was observed in | |
| Aguilar et al. ( | Spain | All Male | SCZ suicidal: 37.12 (10.02), SCZ non Suicidal: 42.65 (10.19) | Gray Matter density | 1.5 T, 3D T1-weighted, SPM5 processing | DSM-IV | Reduction in gray matter in the left superior temporal lobe and left orbitofrontal cortex was observed in patients with a | |
| Rüsch et al. ( | Italy | 42 F/68 M | SCZ suicidal attempt: 30.3 (6.5), SCZ no suicidal attempt: 37.3 (11.6), Healthy controls: 36.0 | Inferior frontal region white matter volumes | T1-weighted 3D SPM2 processing | DSM-IV/SCID-I | Increased bilateral inferior frontal white matter volumes were shown by patients |