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Hormones Got You Down?
Hormones may play a pivotal role in women's maladies.
By Psychology Today.com
PMS-related moodiness. Post-partum depression. Menopausal melancholy. At each
stage of life, women are vulnerable to low spirits. But research shows it's not
just the psychological stress of aging, childbirth or cramps that brings on the
blues. It's the physiological factor that ties them together -- hormones.
Normal hormonal changes that take place before menstruation and menopause and
after childbirth trigger alterations in brain chemistry, fostering depression,
says Margaret Spinelli, M.D., director of the Maternal Mental Health Program at
the New York State Psychiatric Institute. While people have long linked
depression and hormones, now there is hard evidence to support the link.
Hormones released by the ovaries -- estrogen and progesterone -- actually seem
to influence the neurotransmitters, such as serotonin, norepinephrine and
dopamine, that are known to affect mood. Normally, estrogen blocks enzymes that
break serotonin down, allowing more of the spirit-lifting substance to stay
operative in the brain and act like an antidepressant. But before menstruation,
after giving birth, and during menopause, when estrogen levels dip, serotonin
levels plunge, too. Studies show that women who suffer from PMS have decreased
serotonin levels during that time, and that post-partum depression is likely
associated with the fall of estrogen levels and its effect on the brain.
Some women -- that is, their brains -- are especially vulnerable to hormone
changes, says Spinelli. That also means we can treat them using brain chemistry.
Of women who take a serotonin-boosting antidepressant for PMS, 60 to 70 percent
experience relief from their symptoms. Whether you have PMS, post-partum
depression or menopause, Spinelli says: "You need treatment just as a person
with diabetes needs it."
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