| Literature DB >> 31405085 |
Luca Bonanni1, Flavia Gualtieri1, David Lester2, Giulia Falcone1, Adele Nardella1, Andrea Fiorillo3, Maurizio Pompili4.
Abstract
Background andEntities:
Keywords: PTSD; anhedonia; suicidal behavior; suicide; suicide risk
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31405085 PMCID: PMC6723513 DOI: 10.3390/medicina55080458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Summary of reports on suicide behavior and anhedonia.
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| Zielinski et al. 2017 | Prospective longitudinal study | 187 participants | Participants (mean age = 34.41) with a history of non-suicidal self-injury or previous suicide attempts | To verify if modifications in depressive symptoms and anhedonia can be considered as predictive factors of suicide and self-harm behavior | - DASS-21 © to assess depressive symptoms | Anhedonia scores were higher in those with prior suicide attempts than in those with a history of non-suicidal self-injury. Depressive symptoms predicted suicidal behavior directly and also via mediation through anhedonia |
| Ballard et al. 2017 | Retrospective longitudinal study | 100 participants | Patients (18–65 years) affected by treatment-resistant major depressive disorder ( | To evaluate the relationship between the decrease of suicidal ideation after ketamine administration and the reduction of anhedonia | - BDI *-II and the SHAPS # to assess anhedonia | At baseline, anhedonia scores were associated with suicidal ideation. After administration of ketamine, both suicidal ideation and anhedonia declined. The change in anhedonia accounted for an additional 13% of the variance for changes in suicidal thoughts beyond the effects of depressive symptoms |
| Ballard et al. 2016 | Prospective study from the STEP-BD study (4360 patients) | 530 participants | Subjects who attempted or died by suicide ( | To individualize which clinical dimensions (suicidal ideation, loss of interest, anxiety, psychomotor agitation, high-risk behavior) increase before suicidal conduct | - Clinical Monitoring Form (CMF) for clinic evaluation | Patients with suicidal behavior had an elevation of all symptoms, including loss of interest. Suicidal ideation and loss of interest were highly intense in the months before the suicidal behavior and can be considered a risk factor for suicidal behavior in bipolar patients |
| Xie et al. 2014 | Cross-sectional study | 60 participants | Participants (18–60 years) included patients affected by major depressive disorder ( | To analyze the association between anhedonia, pain avoidance motivation, and suicidal ideation | - BDI *-II to assess depressive symptoms | In AID task, the HSI had longer response times (RTs) under the reward condition than those under the punishment condition ( |
| Spijker et al. 2010 | Prospective epidemiologic survey | 586 participants | Data were extracted from the Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study (NEMESIS). Participants were adults (18–64 years) with a depressive spectrum disorder (≥2 depressive symptoms—according to Composite International Diagnostic Interview—CIDI) | To individuate determinants of suicidality (suicidal ideation and suicide attempts) and compare these two factors | - One item of the CIDI to evaluate suicidal ideation and suicide attempts | Suicidal ideation was influenced by different clinical features: longer duration of depression—13 months—( |
| Oei et al. 1990 | Cross-sectional study | 46 participants | Patients (18–65 years) with depressive symptoms (according to DSM-III) were recruited from Department of Psychiatry of the University Hospital in Utrecht (The Netherlands) | To evaluate the relationship between anhedonia, suicidal behavior, and dexamethasone non suppression | - HDRS ß and MADRS † for depression | The combination of anhedonia ( |
| Fawcett et al. 1990 | Prospective study | 954 participants | 954 subjects (mean age = 38.1) affected by major affective disorder (according to Research Diagnostic Criteria) | To identify clinical factors related to suicidal risk | - Schedules for affective disorders and schizophrenia (SADS) | 3% of the subjects committed suicide; 41% of the patients died during the first year of follow-up. Suicide was associated with anhedonia ( |
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| Jahn et al. 2016 | Prospective study | 162 participants | Patients (mean age = 46.84) affected by schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder (according to DSM-IV) | To examine the role of social functioning on suicidal ideation | - BPRS ↔ (24-item expanded version) to assess symptoms | Motivation and pleasure-related negative symptoms influenced the relationship between social role functioning and suicidal ideation ( |
| Loas et al. 2009 | Prospective study | 150 participants | 150 in- or outpatients affected by chronic schizophrenia were included from April 1991 to July 1995 and followed-up for 14 years | To compare clinical symptoms (positive and negative) of schizophrenic patients who died by suicide vs. patients who died by other causes | - BPRS ↔ | Patients who died from suicide had a shorter duration of illness, and a higher level of education vs. patients died from other causes ( |
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| Spitzer et al. 2018 | Cross-sectional study | 373 participants | Psychology undergraduates students (mean age = 19.9) enrolled in a public university in the southeastern United States who satisfied criterion A of PTSD (DSM-5) | To analyze the association between PTSD dimensionality (based on the six-factor anhedonia model) and acquired capability for suicide (including fearlessness of pain involved in dying and fearlessness about death) | - FOP ж and FAD ∞ | Anhedonia cluster symptoms of PTSD was significantly related to the fearlessness of pain involved in dying ( |
| Guina et al. 2017 | Cross-sectional self-report survey | 480 participants | Adults outpatients recruited at a military medical center with previous trauma | To investigate the relationships between suicide attempts and PTSD, trauma types, demographics, use of substance and benzodiazepine prescriptions | - Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders | Suicide attempts were significantly associated with severity of PTSD symptom ( |
| Chen et al. 2017 | Survey | 36,309 participants | Participants (≥18 years) were recruited in 2012–2013. A sample of 23,936 subjects (2457 veterans and 21,479 non-veterans) had a history of at least a traumatic event | To evaluate the clinical dimension of PTSD and its relationship with suicide attempts | - Lifetime suicide attempts-AUDADIS | PTSD can be considered as a risk factor for suicide attempts and anhedonia. Anhedonia was recognized as a latent factor of PTSD and had a statistically significant effect on suicide attempts ( |
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| Hawes et al. 2018 | Prospective study | 395 participants | Participants (≥18 years) recruited from three adult psychiatric outpatient centers in New York City between January 2016 and March 2017 | To explore the different effects of chronic vs. acute anhedonia on suicidal ideation and lifetime suicide attempts | - SHAPS # to assess anhedonia; | Recent changes in the capacity to experience pleasure is better for predicting near-term suicidal ideation than is chronic anhedonia. The acutely anhedonic group reported greater severity of suicidal ideation in the past-week ( |
| Loas et al. 2016 | Cross-sectional study | 122 participants | 122 adult patients (mean age = 44.64) recruited between 2010 and 2013 in the Psychiatric Unit of the CHU of Amiens. Subjects had a diagnosis of mood disorder ( | To explore the association between anhedonia, alexithymia, impulsivity, suicidal ideation, recent suicide attempt, C-Reactive Protein (CRP) and serum lipid profile | - TAS-20 ꭥ for alexithymia | Anhedonia was related to low total cholesterol level ( |
| Winer et al.2014 | Prospective cohort study | 1529 participants | Adult inpatients (mean age: 35.55 years) of a private, not-for-profit Psychiatric structure in the southern United States recruited between April 2008 and August 2011. Participants were affected by: depressive disorder (53.0%); bipolar disorder (16.06%); anxiety disorder (4.86%) | To investigate the association between suicidality and anhedonia | - BDI *-II (Anhedonia, depression symptoms and suicidal ideation were assessed at admission and discharge) | Anhedonia was associated with suicidality at baseline ( |
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| Yaseen et al. 2016 | Cross-sectional analysis | 135 participants | Attempted suicides or high-risk patients admitted to an emergency room at Mount Sinai Beth Israel Hospital (New York) | To explore the association of anhedonia with suicidal ideation in attempted suicides and high-risk patients | - C-SSRS ꝸ to assess suicidal behavior | Prior suicidal ideation was significantly associated with anhedonia, anxiety, and feelings of entrapment. Entrapment and anhedonia were independently associated also with the severity of suicidal ideation |
| Loas 2007 | Follow-up study | 106 participants | Attempted suicides admitted to the Hospital Nord d’Amiens | To predict suicide in a sample of attempted suicides | - PAS % to assess anhedonia | Patients who died from suicide in 6.5-year follow-up had lower anhedonia scores than those who did not die |
| Loas et al. 2000 | Cross-sectional study | 207 participants | Depressed patients ( | To assess the effect of anhedonia on suicide and parasuicide in patients with depressive disorder and in healthy subjects | - CPAS ° to assess anhedonia | Level of anhedonia was higher in depressed attempters vs. not-depressed attempters ( |
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| Daghigh et al. 2018 | Cross-sectional study | 404 participants | Students of Kashan University (center of Persia) | To replicate in an Iranian sample finding of the association between anhedonia, suicide ideation and suicide attempts | - SLIPS ¥ for anhedonia | Anhedonia was associated with suicidal risk ( |
| Loas et al. 2018 | Cross-sectional study | 557 participants | Participants were physicians | To explore the relationship between suicidality and anhedonia in a general population | - An abridged version of BDI *-13 | Anhedonia was associated with both suicidal ideation ( |
| Winer et al. 2016 | Cross-sectional study | 1122 participants | Undergraduate students (18–36 years) of a public university in the Southern United States | To assess the relationship between anhedonia, suicidal ideation, and suicide attempt | - SLIPS ¥ for anhedonia | Suicidal ideation was influenced by anhedonia ( |
| Loas et al. 1995 | Cross-sectional study | 224 participants | Healthy adult subjects of the Picardie (region of France) were included | To investigate the association between anhedonia, depression, and suicidal risk | - CPAS ° to assess anhedonia | There was no association between anhedonia and depression or anhedonia and suicidal ideation ( |
§ AID: Affective Incentive Delay; ꚍ AUDADIS-5: The Alcohol Use Disorder and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule; * BDI: Beck Depression Inventory; ךּ BIS-10: Barratt impulsivity scale; ↔ BPRS: Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale; $ BSS: Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation; Ɫ CAINS: Clinical Assessment Interview for Negative Symptoms; ꞔ CES-D: Center of Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; ꝸ C-SSRS: Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale; ° CPAS: Chapman Physical Anhedonia Scale; © DASS: Depression Anxiety Stress Scale; ∞ FAD: Fearlessness About Death; ↑ FDI-24: Future Disposition Inventory-24; ж FOP: Scales for Fearlessness of Pain Involved in Dying; ß HDRS: Hamilton Rating Scale for depression; † MADRS: Montgomery–Asberg Depression Rating Scale; ~ MID: Monetary Incentive Delay; ⌂ MPQ-SC: Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire; € OSI: Ottawa Self-Injury Inventory-Clinical; Ꙩ PANSS: Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; % PAS: Psychache Scale; ∑ RFS: Role Functioning Scale; ↓ SBQ-R: Suicide Behaviors Questionnaire-Revised; # SHAPS: Snaith–Hamilton Pleasure Scale; ¥ SLIPS: Specific Loss of Interest and Pleasure Scale; Ø SSI5: Scale for Suicide Ideation; ℅ STAI: State-Trait-Anxiety Inventory; ꭥ TAS-20: 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale; ¢ TDPPS: Three-Dimensional Psychological Pain Scale.