I'm trying to prove an identity involving the digamma function $\psi(z)$, but I can't seem to figure out a way to do it. Can anyone help me out? The identity is
$$\psi\left(\frac{m}{2} + iy\right) + \psi\left(\frac{m}{2} - iy\right) = \psi\left(\frac{n}{2} + iy\right) + \psi\left(\frac{n}{2} - iy\right)$$
where $m$ and $n$ are integers satisfying $m + n = 2$, and $y$ is any nonzero real number.
I've tried looking at a couple of the integral representations of $\psi(z)$ listed on the Wikipedia page, but I haven't been able to figure it out from those. I think there's probably some simple integral identity I'm forgetting that would make the whole thing work out - for instance, if I could show that
$$\int_0^\infty \frac{e^{nt/2}\cos(yt)}{\sinh(t/2)}\mathrm{d}t = \int_0^\infty \frac{e^{-nt/2}\cos(yt)}{\sinh(t/2)}\mathrm{d}t$$
for $n \in \mathbb{Z}, y \neq 0$, I think I'd be set. So what I'm hoping to get is a pointer to some relation like that which I could use. Of course I'd be happy with a full proof if you prefer ;-)
P.S. I know this sounds kind of "homework-y," but it's not for a homework assignment; I'm trying to verify a calculation in a physics paper.