Authors
David A Brent, Maria Oquendo, Boris Birmaher, Laurence Greenhill, David Kolko, Barbara Stanley, Jamie Zelazny, Beth Brodsky, Jeffrey Bridge, Steve Ellis, J Octavio Salazar, J John Mann
Publication date
2002/9/1
Journal
Archives of general psychiatry
Volume
59
Issue
9
Pages
801-807
Publisher
American Medical Association
Description
Background
Although adoption, twin, and family studies have shown that suicidal behavior is familial, the risk factors for familial transmission from parent to child remain unclear.
Methods
A high-risk family study was conducted comparing the offspring of 2 mood-disordered groups: suicide attempters and nonattempters. Recruited from 2 sites, probands were 81 attempters and 55 nonattempters, with 183 and 116 offspring, respectively. Offspring were assessed by investigators masked to proband status. Probands and offspring were assessed with respect to psychopathologic findings, suicide attempt history, impulsive aggression, and exposure to familial environmental stressors.
Results
Offspring of attempters had a 6-fold increased risk of suicide attempts relative to offspring of nonattempters. Familial transmission of suicide attempt was more likely if (1) probands had a history of sexual abuse and (2) offspring were …
Total citations
20032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241719302424302422294245282218172015211514175