Case Report Describes Possible Betahistine–Suicidality Link - Summary - MDSpire

Case Report Describes Possible Betahistine–Suicidality Link

  • By

  • Andrea Surnit

  • June 27, 2026

  • 4 min

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Objective:

To describe a possible association between betahistine exposure and depressive symptoms with suicidal ideation.

Approach:
  • Case Report: A 33-year-old male patient treated for dizziness experienced depressive symptoms and suicidal ideation after betahistine treatment.
  • Literature Review: The researchers reviewed prior database-level signals and adverse event reports related to betahistine.
Key Findings:
  • The patient developed low mood and suicidal ideation after rechallenging with betahistine.
  • Symptoms resolved completely within 2 days of discontinuing betahistine.
  • The adverse drug reaction was classified as 'probable' based on established assessment scales.
Interpretation:

The researchers noted the close temporal association between betahistine use and the emergence of depressive symptoms.

Limitations:
  • Single-case design limits generalizability.
  • Inability to establish definitive causality.
  • Potential recall bias and lack of structured psychiatric assessment.
Conclusion:

The authors emphasized vigilance for neuropsychiatric adverse reactions to histamine receptor-active drugs, as symptoms may occur close to treatment initiation.

Sources:

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