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Press release Published on 20.1.2025, 14:11

Young survivors of severe brain hemorrhage have an elevated risk of suicide: more attention needs to be paid to psychological rehabilitation 

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A nationwide Finnish study conducted at HUS Neurosurgery revealed that survivors of life-threatening brain hemorrhage have a significantly elevated risk of suicide. The risk is especially higher in patients under the age of 40 and those with a recent brain hemorrhage.

Aleksanteri Asikainen lääkärintakissa.

Bachelor of Medicine and Ph.D. student Aleksanteri Asikainen.

Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a life-threatening cerebrovascular disorder where the rupture of a bulging blood vessel, called an aneurysm, causes bleeding in the brain. Today, more and more patients with SAH survive and make a good physical recovery, but at least one third of all affected patients suffer from depression and anxiety. 

A study by researchers from HUS and University of Helsinki published in the journal Neurology investigated the risk of suicide in Finland over two decades among patients who survived SAH for at least one month after their illness. The study included more than 5,700 patients. 

The results show that SAH survivors have about 75 percent higher risk of suicide in comparison with the general Finnish population of the same age and sex. A particularly elevated risk, almost four times higher, was observed in young survivors aged 15 to 39. Moreover, the first year post-SAH appeared to be a particularly high-risk period for suicide. 

Physical recovery alone is not enough  

“It is worrying that as many as 14 percent of deaths among young SAH survivors were due to suicide. The increased risk of suicide seems to be higher following a SAH than after other cerebrovascular disorders, namely cerebral infarction and intracerebral hemorrhage,” says Aleksanteri Asikainen, Bachelor of Medicine and Ph.D. student from the University of Helsinki. 

The link between SAH and elevated risk of suicide is thought to be due to a sudden decline in physical and cognitive function, which increases psychological distress and exacerbates existing mental health disorders. In young, often healthy, individuals, the consequences of SAH are likely to be more evident in everyday life than in the general population.  

The other members of the research group, HUS Neurosurgeon and Associate Professor Miikka Korja, Professor of Genetic Epidemiology from the University of Helsinki Jaakko Kaprio, and Physician Specializing in Neurosurgery at HUS and Associate Professor Ilari Rautalin stress the need for further research to more precisely identify risk factors that influence the suicide risk and to develop rehabilitation measures to support patients. 

“Our study underlines that physical recovery alone is not enough. It is more important than ever to identify patients' psychological support needs and to intervene early in mental health issues to prevent consequences that can significantly reduce quality of life and even be life-threatening," says Rautalin, the senior author of the article. 

 

The study was published in the journal Neurology on January 15, 2025. 

 

In university hospitals, research is part of the treatment: we continue to evaluate and develop our treatments based on research knowledge and patient experience. HUS and the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Helsinki are close partners in science. We publish approximately 2,400 peer-reviewed research articles annually, which we highlight in our news. 

The HUS media service is available for the media Mon–Thu 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. and Fri 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m., tel. 050 427 2875, or via e-mail: viestinta@hus.fi. 

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