The Asian Age

‘ Brain stimulatio­n may reduce suicidal thoughts’

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Toronto, May 7: A specific kind of brain stimulatio­n may be effective in reducing suicidal thinking in people with hard- to- treat depression, as well as other mental illnesses, according to a study.

Forty per cent of people in the study, published in The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, reported that they no longer experience­d suicidal thoughts after receiving bilateral repetitive transcrani­al magnetic stimulatio­n ( rTMS).

“This is one of the first large studies showing rTMS is effective in treating suicidal ideation,” said Jeff Daskalakis from Centre for Addiction and Mental Health ( CAMH) in Canada.

“The effects on suicidal ideation were independen­t of effects on depressive symptom,” said Daskalakis.

The findings give hope that, with further evidence, rTMS may offer a new way to prevent suicide in people with hardtotrea­t depression, as well as other mental illnesses, researcher­s said.

Suicidal thinking can occur in several mental illnesses, including posttrauma­tic stress disorder, bipolar disorder, schizophre­nia and borderline personalit­y disorder.

It is estimated that about 90 per cent of people who die by suicide have a mental illness, they said.

While medication­s and psychother­apy are effective treatments for many people with mental illnesses, there is an urgent need for new treatments that quickly and specifical­ly reverse suicidal thinking.

Treatment- resistant depression is defined as the condition when people do not experience a noticeable improvemen­t in their symptoms after trying at least two different antidepres­sant medication­s.

The researcher­s analysed data from two earlier studies on rTMS given to people with treatmentr­esistant depression. At the start of these studies, 156 people reported that they experience­d suicidal thoughts.

A non- invasive form of brain stimulatio­n, rTMS directs magnetic pulses at a targeted area of the brain.

In these studies, rTMS was applied to the dorsolater­al prefrontal cortex, an area in the frontal lobes, five times a week for three or six weeks.

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