Literature DB >> 24360141

Menstrual mood disorders are associated with blunted sympathetic reactivity to stress.

Rebecca R Klatzkin1, Adomas Bunevicius2, Catherine A Forneris2, Susan Girdler2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Few studies have directly compared women with a menstrually related mood disorder (MRMD) with women who have suffered from depression for stress reactivity phenotypes. It is unclear whether blunted responses to stress in women with a MRMD reflect a unique phenotype of MRMDs or may be explained by a history of depression.
METHODS: We assessed cardiovascular reactivity to stress in four groups: 1) Women with a MRMD without a history of depression (n=37); 2) women with a MRMD plus a history of depression (n=26); 3) women without a MRMD and without a history of depression (n=43); and 4) women without a MRMD but with a history of depression (n=20).
RESULTS: Women with a MRMD showed blunted myocardial (heart rate and cardiac index) reactivity to mental stress compared to non-MRMD women, irrespective of histories of depression. Hypo-reactivity to stress predicted greater premenstrual symptom severity in the entire sample. Women with a MRMD showed blunted norepinephrine and diastolic blood pressure stress reactivity relative to women with no MRMD, but only when no history of depression was present. Both MRMD women and women with depression histories reported greater negative subjective responses to stress relative to their non-MRMD and never depressed counterparts.
CONCLUSION: Our findings support the assertion that a blunted stress reactivity profile represents a unique phenotype of MRMDs and also underscore the importance of psychiatric histories to stress reactivity. Furthermore, our results emphasize the clinical relevance of myocardial hypo-reactivity to stress, since it predicts heightened premenstrual symptom severity.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Depression; Menstrually related mood disorders; Premenstrual dysphoric disorder; Reactivity; Stress; Sympathetic nervous system

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24360141      PMCID: PMC3951307          DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2013.11.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psychosom Res        ISSN: 0022-3999            Impact factor:   3.006


  83 in total

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