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Women
experience depression about twice as often as men. (Blehar MD, Oren
DA. Gender differences in depression. Medscape
Women's Health,
1997;2:3. Revised from: Women's increased vulnerability to mood
disorders: Integrating psychobiology and epidemiology. Depression,
1995;3:3-12). Many hormonal factors may contribute to the increased
rate of depression in women—particularly such factors as menstrual
cycle changes, pregnancy, miscarriage, postpartum period,
pre-menopause, and menopause. Many women also face additional
stresses such as responsibilities both at work and home, single
parenthood, and caring for children and for aging parents.
A
recent NIMH study showed that in the case of severe premenstrual
syndrome (PMS), women with a preexisting vulnerability to PMS
experienced relief from mood and physical symptoms when their sex
hormones were suppressed. Shortly after the hormones were
re-introduced, they again developed symptoms of PMS. Women without a
history of PMS reported no effects of the hormonal manipulation.
(Rubinow DR, Schmidt PJ, Roca CA. Estrogen-serotonin interactions:
Implications for affective regulation. Biological
Psychiatry,
1998; 44(9):839-50).
(Schmidt
PJ, Neiman LK, Danaceau MA, Adams LF, Rubinow DR. Differential
behavioral effects of gonadal steroids in women with and in those
without premenstrual syndrome. Journal
of the American Medical Association,
1998; 338:209-16). |