Title A recent suicide attempt and the heartbeat: Electrophysiological findings from a trans-diagnostic cohort of patients and healthy controls.
Author Ruesch, Annia; Villar de Araujo, Tania; Bankwitz, Anna; Hormann, Christoph; Adank, Atalia; Ip, Cheng-Teng; Schoretsanitis, Georgios; Kleim, Birgit; Olbrich, Sebastian
Journal J Psychiatr Res Publication Year/Month 2023-Jan
PMID 36516500 PMCID -N/A-
Affiliation + expend 1.University of Zurich, Psychiatric University Hospital Zurich, Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Zurich, Switzerland. Electronic address: annia.rueesch@pukzh.ch.

Suicidal behavior is influenced by a multitude of factors, making prediction and prevention of suicide attempts (SA) a challenge. A useful tool to uncover underlying pathophysiology or propose new therapy approaches are biomarkers, especially within the context of point-of-care tests. Heart rate variability (HRV) is a well-established biomarker of mental health, and measures the activity of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system (PNS). Previous studies reported a correlation between lower PNS activity and suicidality. However, most studies involved participants from a healthy population, patients without history of suicide attempts, or patients with a single diagnosis. 52 in-patients with a recent suicide attempt (<6 months), and 43 controls without history of SA or psychiatric diagnoses confirmed study participation. The included patients age ranged between 18 and 65 years, 65% had psychiatric comorbidities. Patients with dementia, cognitive impairments, acute psychosis, chronic non suicidal self-harming behavior, or current electroconvulsive therapy were excluded. A 15-min resting state electrocardiography was recorded with two bipolar electrodes attached to the right and left insides of the wrists. The multiple regression analyses showed lower parasympathetic, and higher sympathetic activity in patients compared to controls. Partial correlation found a positive trend result between self-reported suicidality and the very low frequency band. ROC curve analysis revealed an acceptable to excellent clinical accuracy of HRV parameters. Therefore, HRV parameters could be reliable discriminative biomarkers between in-patients with a recent SA and healthy controls. One limitation is the lack of a control group consisting of in-patients without life-time suicidal ideation or attempts.

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