Stress response in postpartum women with and with outobsessive-compulsive symptoms: an fMRI study.

Catherine Lord, Meir Steiner, Claudio N Soares, Caitlin L Carew, Geoffrey B Hall

Women's Health Concerns Clinic, St. Joseph's Healthcare and Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.

Journal Article: Journal of psychiatry & neuroscience: JPN (impact factor: 3.58). 11/2011; 37(2):78-86. DOI: 10.1503/jpn.110005

Abstract

Background: During the postpartum period, some women might be under a considerable amount of stress and at increased risk for on-set or exacerbation of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Little is known about the stress response correlates during the postpartum period and in patients with OCD. This study aimed to examine the cerebral, psychologic and endocrine correlates of the stress response in patients with OCD and during the postpartum period. Methods: Women with postpartum OCD, healthy postpartum women and healthy mothers past the postpartum period underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging while facing a reliable psychosocial stressor (the Montreal Imaging Stress Task). Stress-related psychologic and endocrine responses (i.e., cortisol) were obtained. Results: We enrolled 12 women with postpartum OCD, 16 healthy postpartum women and 11 healthy mothers past the postpartum period in our study. Compared with healthy postpartum counterparts, postpartum women with OCD had a heightened self-reported and endocrine stress response associated with a distinct brain activation pattern in response to psychosocial stress involving the orbitofrontal and temporal cortices. Moreover, compared with mothers assessed in a period of time beyond the postpartum period, healthy postpartum women did not differ in psychologic and cortisol response to stress, but recruited different brain regions, such as the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the anterior cingulate cortex, during exposure to stress. Limitations: Potential confounding factors, such as medication use, breastfeeding, parity and personality factors, may have modulated the stress-related endocrine response and could not be assessed in this study. Conclusion: Obsessive-compulsive disorder and the postpartum period differentially influence the brain circuitry underlying psychosocial stress as well as the psychologic and endocrine responses.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

11 healthy mothers
 
16 healthy postpartum women
 
cortisol response
 
endocrine correlates
 
endocrine stress response
 
healthy postpartum counterparts
 
healthy postpartum women
 
heightened self-reported
 
Montreal Imaging Stress Task
 
personality factors
 
postpartum OCD
 
postpartum period differentially influence
 
postpartum women
 
psychosocial stress
 
recruited different brain regions
 
reliable psychosocial stressor
 
stress response
 
stress response correlates
 
stress-related endocrine response
 
Stress-related psychologic