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Vitam Horm


Title:Exposure to female pheromones during pregnancy causes postpartum anxiety in mice
Author(s):Larsen CM; Grattan DR;
Address:"Centre for Neuroendocrinology and Department of Anatomy and Structural Biology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand"
Journal Title:Vitam Horm
Year:2010
Volume:83
Issue:
Page Number:137 - 149
DOI: 10.1016/S0083-6729(10)83005-5
ISSN/ISBN:0083-6729 (Print) 0083-6729 (Linking)
Abstract:"The postpartum period is associated with an increased incidence of pathological anxiety, exerting a substantial burden on both the mother and the baby. We have shown that pharmacological suppression of prolactin in early pregnancy decreases maternal neurogenesis to cause postpartum anxiety. The present data demonstrate that physiological suppression of prolactin secretion through exposure to unfamiliar female pheromones throughout pregnancy prevented the normal postpartum attenuation of anxiety in mice, resulting in high anxiety relative to postpartum controls. Female pheromone-exposed mice also showed severely impaired maternal behavior in an anxiogenic situation. Mice exposed to female pheromones had decreased serum prolactin levels in early pregnancy, resulting in an ablation of the normal increase of neurogenesis on day 7 of pregnancy. These data demonstrate that low serum prolactin levels in early pregnancy, whether induced pharmacologically or as a physiological consequence of exposure to unfamiliar female pheromones, result in failure to show the normal adaptive decrease in anxiety after birth. This provides new insight into possible mechanisms that might underlie postpartum anxiety in women"
Keywords:"Animals Anxiety/*etiology Depression, Postpartum/etiology Female Maternal Behavior/*physiology Mice Pheromones/*physiology *Postpartum Period Pregnancy Prolactin/blood;"
Notes:"MedlineLarsen, Caroline M Grattan, David R eng Review 2010/09/14 Vitam Horm. 2010; 83:137-49. doi: 10.1016/S0083-6729(10)83005-5"

 
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