Reduced orexin levels in the cerebrospinal fluid of suicidal patients with major depressive disorder.
Brundin. Lena L; Björkqvist. Maria M; Petersén. Asa A; Träskman-Bendz. Lil L
Key Findings
- CSF orexin‑A levels are significantly lower in suicidal patients with major depressive disorder.
- Orexin levels correlate with CSF levels of somatostatin, DSIP‑like immunoreactivity, and CRF, but not with leptin, vasopressin, or TSH.
- Patients were medication‑free at the time of lumbar puncture, indicating the findings reflect the disorder itself rather than drug effects.
Practical Outcomes
- The study is mainly observational and doesn’t provide direct guidance for supplementing or dosing peptides. It suggests that low orexin (and related peptides like DSIP) may be part of the neurobiology of severe depression, but more research is needed before any self‑directed interventions can be recommended.
Summary
People who have major depression and have tried suicide have lower levels of a brain chemical called orexin in their spinal fluid compared to people with less severe mood problems. This low orexin is linked to other brain chemicals that affect sleep and stress, but it doesn't seem related to hormones like leptin or thyroid hormone.
Abstract
Orexins are neuropeptides selectively expressed in a small number of neurons in the lateral-posterior hypothalamus. We measured orexin-A in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 66 patients with major depressive disorder (MDD), dysthymia and adjustment disorder after a suicide attempt. Blood samples confirmed that the patients were free from antidepressive and neuroleptic medication at the time of the lumbar punctures. CSF levels of orexin-A were significantly lower in patients with MDD than in patients with adjustment disorder and dysthymia. Orexin correlated significantly with CSF levels of somatostatin, delta sleep inducing peptide-like immunoreactivity (DSIP-LI) and corticotrophin releasing factor (CRF), but not with leptin or vasopressin. Plasma levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) were not reduced in MDD patients, and did not correlate with CSF-orexin. Our results suggest that suicidal patients with MDD have distinct neurobiological features, involving compromised levels of hypothalamic peptides regulating the state of arousal.
Study Information
pubmed
2007
2007-03-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.euroneuro.2007.01.005
212
37