Menstrual Cycle Effects on Hypothalamic Dopamine Receptor Function in Women with a History of Puerperal Bipolar Disorder
article
OA: closed
CC0
⤵ 2 in-corpus citations
AI-generated summary
Recovered women with a history of puerperal bipolar disorder show enhanced growth hormone responses to dopamine receptor stimulation during the luteal phase compared to controls, indicating increased dopaminergic receptor sensitivity to ovarian hormones.
One-sentence paraphrase of the abstract; not a substitute for reading it. No clinical advice. How this works
Abstract
Neuroendocrine challenge tests of hypothalamic dopamine receptor function in the early postpartum period suggest that the sensitivity of these receptors is increased in women with a history of bipolar disorder after childbirth. We tested the hypothesis that, in women predisposed to bipolar disorder in the puerperium, hypothalamic dopamine receptor function is more sensitive to changes in circulating ovarian hormone concentrations than in women without such histories. Eight fully recovered and drug-free women who had had at least one episode of bipolar illness following childbirth were compared with nine normal controls. Growth hormone (GH) responses to apomorphine (APO 0.005 mg s.c.) were measured in the early follicular phase, when plasma concentrations of ovarian hormones are low, and in the mid-luteal phase, when they are relatively high. The recovered bipolar subjects and the controls did not differ from each other in their follicular and midluteal oestrogen and progesterone concentrations. In the midluteal phase, both groups had increased oestrogen and progesterone levels. The recovered bipolar subjects did not differ from controls in baseline concentrations of GH in either of the menstrual phases. The APO-GH responses of the two groups did not differ in the follicular phase, but in the midluteal phase, when female sex steroids are relatively increased, the recovered group had significantly enhanced APO-GH responses [MANOVA for repeated measures: (i) area under the curve, group by phase effect: p < 0.04; (ii) GH peak rise after APO, group by phase effect: p < 0.056] and the responses were not related to concurrent measures of mood. The results of this small study of women predisposed to bipolar disorder in the puerperium shows an increased dopaminergic receptor sensitivity in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. It suggests that their dopaminergic systems have increased sensitivity to changes in circulating female sex steroids. This may be aetiologically relevant to the pathogenesis of puerperal bipolar disorder.
My notes (saved in your browser only)
Citation neighborhood (sparse)
Too few in-corpus citations on either side for a chart; here are the lists.
Cites (1)
Cited by (2)
References (50)
- Dopamine Supersensitivity and Hormonal Status in Puerperal Psychosis via openalex
- W1513863752 via openalex
- W1587925367 via openalex
- W1592770056 via openalex
- W1766504936 via openalex
- W1903748805 via openalex
- W1941754197 via openalex
- W1969921863 via openalex
- W1971405858 via openalex
- W1971806188 via openalex
- W1974702488 via openalex
- W1979221544 via openalex
- W1995342472 via openalex
- W2002748611 via openalex
- W2009531375 via openalex
- W2010439443 via openalex
- W2016018058 via openalex
- W2019626637 via openalex
- W2023706201 via openalex
- W2023761475 via openalex
- W2023983721 via openalex
- W2026390392 via openalex
- W2036350495 via openalex
- W2044234384 via openalex
- W2044582203 via openalex
- W2045651223 via openalex
- W2047136857 via openalex
- W2048537632 via openalex
- W2049165791 via openalex
- W2049408507 via openalex
- W2050969274 via openalex
- W2054761407 via openalex
- W2056087901 via openalex
- W2075494221 via openalex
- W2076080760 via openalex
- W2077493120 via openalex
- W2080033986 via openalex
- W2087570787 via openalex
- W2089546917 via openalex
- W2092822955 via openalex
- W2096266931 via openalex
- W2097010314 via openalex
- W2108287599 via openalex
- W2116257475 via openalex
- W2148156943 via openalex
- W2421592176 via openalex
- W2764362690 via openalex
- W4211044040 via openalex
- W567111790 via openalex
- W4285719527 via openalex
Cited by (2)
Source provenance
- openalex
- last seen: 2026-06-10T17:14:06.276822+00:00
License: CC0
· commercial use OK