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Reconceptualizing Suicide as Impaired Temporal Discounting: an fMRI Study in Bipolar Disorder
The investigators propose to explore the link between bipolar disorder, anxiety, and suicide by investigating intertemporal discounting in depressed, suicidal patients with bipolar I and II disorder who have various levels of anxiety. The investigators will determine the effect of anxiety on their intertemporal discounting (small rewards now compared to larger rewards later) in a decision-making paradigm and investigate the associated functional neuroanatomy using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
Among the various psychological properties of the decision making process is temporal discounting, which is a decrease in the subjective value of a good as a function of the amount of and delay to reward. The ability to decide between immediate versus future rewards depends on self-control and consideration of the future. We can reconceptualize suicide as intertemporal discounting with an interaction between cognition and mood. Someone contemplating suicide weighs the time value of costs and benefits with shifting negative and positive valence systems. To the best of our knowledge, no one has assessed the interaction between mood symptoms, anxiety, and their impact on the temporal discounting paradigm in bipolar patients. If we better understood the difference between anxious, suicidal and non-anxious, suicidal bipolar patients, we could design more effective interventions to prevent this tragic outcome. We propose a novel paradigm to explore the link between bipolar disorder, anxiety, and suicide. If we conceptualize suicidal behavior and death by suicide as decisions, then it makes sense to examine key aspects of decision making in these patients. In particular, we can examine how mood, anxiety, and suicidal ideation and behaviors arise from patterns of decision making, along with neural correlates of decision-making, as assessed with fMRI.
Age
18 - 65 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Bipolar Clinic and Research Program at Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Start Date
July 14, 2014
Primary Completion Date
August 29, 2016
Completion Date
August 29, 2016
Last Updated
February 9, 2017
28
ACTUAL participants
fMRI Scanning
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital
Collaborators
NCT07360600
NCT06793397
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