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Brain
Chemical Linked
to Teen Suicides in Study
A brain enzyme known to be involved
in mood disorders may be in short supply in the brains of teenage
suicide victims, a finding that could point to research for prevention.
Whether the lack of the enzyme,
protein kinase C (PKC), was a cause or an effect of the mental
state that led to suicide was not clear from the post-mortem study
of the brains of 34 teenagers, half of whom had committed suicide
and the rest who died from other causes.
The researchers said the lower
levels of the enzyme may be related to abnormalities in the interactions
between the brain and hormonal glands. The enzyme is targeted
by some mood-stabilizing drugs.
Whatever the mechanism, the decreased
level of the enzyme is a "vitally important observation that will
help not only in understanding the neurobiological profile of
teen suicide but also in advancing ideas for therapeutic intervention,"
said study author Ghanshyam Pandey of the University of Illinois
at Chicago.
Suicide annually is the second-leading
cause of death among U.S. teenagers.
The suicide rate has risen sharply
among male teenagers in the past two decades, said the study,
published in the July issue of The Archives of General Psychiatry.
Reference
Source 89
July
6, 2004
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