LONDON
- British researchers say the brains of people who commit suicide
are heavier than normal. A study by Emad Salib from Liverpool
University and George Tadros from the Northern Birmingham Mental
Health Trust is the first to report an increase in brain weight
in suicide victims.
Salib and
Tadros reviewed the coroners' records of people aged 60 and above,
comparing the brains of 142 people suspected of having taken their
own lives with the brains of 150 people who died of natural causes.
The suicide group's brains weighed more averaging 1352
grams compared with 1238 grams for the natural causes group (the
difference being about the weight of an egg).
One possible
explanation is that depression may cause the brain to swell. Other
research has found that people who are depressed and contemplate
suicide have significantly heavier adrenal glands.
But the researchers
say they need to do more research before declaring the true cause.
The report
appears in the current issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry.
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