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Neurobehavioral impact of menopause on mood.

  • Jeanne Leventhal Alexander
  • , Lorraine Dennerstein
  • , Nancy Fugate Woods
  • , Krista Kotz
  • , Uriel Halbreich
  • , Vivien Burt
  • , Gregg Richardson
  • Kaiser Permanente

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

The menopausal transition is a time of risk for mood change ranging from distress to minor depression to major depressive disorder in a vulnerable subpopulation of women in the menopausal transition. Somatic symptoms have been implicated as a risk factor for mood problems, although these mood problems have also been shown to occur independently of somatic symptoms. Mood problems have been found to increase in those with a history of mood continuum disorders, but can also occur de novo as a consequence of the transition. Stress has been implicated in the etiology and the exacerbation of these mood problems. Estrogen and add-back testosterone have both been shown to positively affect mood and well-being. In most cases, the period of vulnerability to mood problems subsides when the woman's hormonal levels stabilize and she enters full menopause.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)S81-S91
JournalExpert Review of Neurotherapeutics
Volume7
Issue number11 Suppl
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2007

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