Psychological and neurobiological aspects of suicide in Adolescents: Current outlooks
Autor
Vargas-Medrano, Javier
Diaz-Pacheco, Valeria
Castaneda, Christopher
Miranda-Arango, Manuel
Longhurst, Melanie
Martin, Sarah L.
Ghumman, Usman
Mangadu, Thenral
Chheda, Sadhana
Thompson, Peter M.
Gadad, Bharathi S.
Institución
Resumen
Suicidality is one of the leading causes of death among young adults in the United
States and represents a significant health problem worldwide. The suicide rate among
adolescents in the United States has increased dramatically in the latest years and has been
accompanied by considerable changes in youth suicide, especially among young girls.
Henceforth, we need a good understanding of the risk factors contributing to suicidal behavior in
youth. An explanatory model for suicidal behavior that links clinical and psychological risk
factors to the underlying neurobiological, neuropsychological abnormalities related to suicidal
behavior might predict to help identify treatment options and have empirical value. Our
explanatory model proposes that developmental, biological factors (genetics, proteomics,
epigenetics, immunological) and psychological or clinical (childhood adversities) may have
causal relevance to the changes associated with suicidal behavior. In this way, our model
integrates findings from several perspectives in suicidality and attempts to explain the
relationship between various neurobiological, genetic, and clinical observations in suicide
research, offering a comprehensive hypothesis to facilitate understanding of this complex
outcome. Unraveling the knowledge of the complex interplay of psychological, biological,
sociobiological, and clinical risk factors is highly essential, concerning the development of
effective prevention strategy plans for suicidal ideation and suicide.