BackgroundThe assessment of suicide risk in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) is somewhat subjective in clinical diagnosis and may lead to diagnostic bias and serious consequences. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine whether MDD patients with suicidal ideation or suicide attempts exhibited local brain functional synchrony and spontaneous activity intensity, thus providing certain imaging basis for suicide assessment. MethodsThis study was conducted using ReHo and ALFF analyses on 213 first episode drug-naïve MDD patients from the REST-meta-MDD consortium. All patients were categorized into MDD with SI or SA group and MDD without SI and SA. A voxel-based two-sample t-test was then used to identify brain regions with significant differences in ReHo or ALFF values. Finally, Reho or ALFF values of those brain regions in MDD with SI or SA group were extracted for correlation analysis with suicide severity. ResultsCompared with MDD patients without SI or SA, MDD patients with SI or SA had increased ReHo in the triangular part of left inferior frontal gyrus, orbital part of right inferior frontal gyrus and right precuneus gyrus, and increased ALFF in the middle occipital gyrus. All of these brain region characteristics were positively correlated with suicide severity on the HAMD 3th item score and HAMD 9th item score. ConclusionOur findings suggest that abnormalities of regional spontaneous brain activity were found in IFG, precuneus gyrus, and MOG among MDD patients with suicidal thoughts or attempts, which provides a reliable imaging basis for identifying and preventing suicide.
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