Menstrual Dysfunction Prior to Onset of Psychiatric Illness Is Reported More Commonly by Women With Bipolar Disorder Than by Women With Unipolar Depression and Healthy Controls
Women with bipolar disorder retrospectively reported early-onset menstrual dysfunction more commonly prior to illness onset than women with unipolar depression or healthy controls.
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This study examined whether early-onset menstrual cycle dysfunction, defined as unpredictable cycle length within 10 days or cycles of 35 days, occurred before onset of psychiatric illness in women with DSM-IV bipolar disorder (STEP-BD cohort), women with DSM-IV unipolar depression (Harvard Study of Moods and Cycles cohort), and healthy controls. Using retrospective reports, the authors found that early-onset menstrual dysfunction was reported more frequently in 34.2% of women with bipolar disorder than in 21.7% of healthy controls, and also more than in 24.5% of women with unipolar depression, while unipolar depression rates did not differ from controls. A major limitation is that the findings rely on retrospective self-report of menstrual timing relative to psychiatric onset, which the paper addresses implicitly through the retrospective design rather than via prospective measurement. Relevance to endometriosis: the paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.
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Cited by (7)
- Prevalence of Heavy Menstrual Bleeding and Its Associated Cognitive Risks and Predictive Factors in Women With Severe Mental Disorders 2022
- Risk-to-befit ratios of consecutive antidepressants for heavy menstrual bleeding in young women with bipolar disorder or major depressive disorder 2022
- Revisiting the wandering womb: Oxytocin in endometriosis and bipolar disorder 2017
- Depressive symptoms and their relationship with endogenous reproductive hormones and sporadic anovulation in premenopausal women 2014
- Menstrual effects on mood symptoms in treated women with bipolar disorder 2011
- Depression in Women with Spontaneous 46, XX Primary Ovarian Insufficiency 2010
- Are Bipolar Mood Symptoms Affected by the Phase of the Menstrual Cycle? 2008
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