7 research outputs found
Mother-to-Infant Bonding in Women with Postpartum Psychosis and Severe Postpartum Depression: A Clinical Cohort Study
Mother-to-infant bonding is important for long-term child development. The aim of this
study was to investigate bonding in women admitted to a Mother and Baby Unit with postpartum
depression (PD, n = 64) and postpartum psychosis (PP, n = 91). Participants completed the Postpartum
Bonding Questionnaire (PBQ), the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) and the Young
Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) weekly during admission. At admission, 57.1% of women with PD
had impaired bonding, compared to only 17.6% of women with PP (p-value < 0.001). At discharge,
only 18.2% of women with PD and 5.9% of women with PP still experienced impaired bonding
(p-value = 0.02). There was a strong association between decrease of depressive and manic symptoms
and improved bonding over an eight-week admission period. In a small group of women (5.7%)
impaired bonding persisted despite being in remission of their psychiatric disorder. The results
from our study show that impaired bonding is a more present and evidently severe problem in
postpartum depression but not so much in postpartum psychosis. Treatment of depressive symptoms
will improve bonding in almost all women, but clinicians should assess if impaired bonding is still
present after remission because for a small group special care and treatment focused on bonding
might be required
Lithium Use during Pregnancy and the Risk of Miscarriage
Recent studies have provided new data on the teratogenicity of lithium. Less is known
about the risk of miscarriage after lithium use during pregnancy. The aim of this study was to
investigate the association between lithium use during pregnancy and miscarriage. Participants were
women with bipolar I disorder and one or more pregnancies, of which information on medication use
and pregnancy outcome was available (n = 443). The unadjusted odds ratios for miscarriage after
lithium use during pregnancy was calculated. Multilevel logistic regression was used to calculate
the odds ratio, adjusted for the age at conception and the clustering of pregnancies per woman.
Miscarriages occurred in 20.8% of the lithium-exposed pregnancies (16/77), compared with 10.9%
of the unexposed pregnancies (40/366) (OR = 2.14; 95% CI: 1.13–4.06). The adjusted odds ratio of
miscarriage after lithium use during pregnancy was 2.94 (95% CI: 1.39–6.22). Lithium use during
pregnancy may increase the risk of miscarriage
Severe Mood Disorders During Pregnancy and the Postpartum Period
The perinatal period is considered a time of increased risk for the development of both first-onset and recurrent severe psychiatric mood disorders. This thesis focuses on the longitudinal disease course of postpartum psychosis and bipolar disorder during this high-risk period and its implications for diagnostic classification
T-cell defects and postpartum depression
BACKGROUND. Most studies of immune dysregulation in perinatal mood and anxiety disorders have focused on peripheral cytokines, but literature from non-perinatal mood disorders also implicates T-cell defects. We sought to characterize proportions of T-cell subtypes in women with postpartum depression. MATERIALS AND METHODS. We enrolled 21 women with postpartum depression (PPD), 39 healthy postpartum controls, and 114 healthy non-postpartum women. Blood was collected in sodium-heparin EDTA tubes and was analyzed using flow cytometry. We conducted statistical tests including linear regression analysis that were aimed at determining differences in proportions of T cell populations among groups. RESULTS. Mean counts of T-cells (all CD3+ T cells), T-helper cells, (CD3+CD4+ T cells), and T-cytotoxic cells (CD3+CD8+ T cells) were significantly increased in healthy postpartum women compared to healthy non-postpartum controls (p < 0.001, p = 0.007, and p = 0.002, respectively), but not in women with PPD. The increases in healthy postpartum women were driven by increases in T(H)1 cells and T regulatory cells, increases that were nonexistent or attenuated in women with postpartum depression. Mean counts of CD4+ T-helper memory cells were also increased in healthy postpartum women (p = 0.009), but slightly decreased in women with PPD (p = 0.066), when compared to healthy non-postpartum controls. CONCLUSIONS. Our study confirms that the postpartum period in healthy women is a time of enhanced T cell activity. Women with postpartum depression failed to show physiological enhanced T-cell activity postpartum, and future research is needed to elucidate etiological mechanisms and consequences
Long-term outcome of postpartum psychosis: a prospective clinical cohort study in 106 women
Objective: We aimed to investigate the outcome of postpartum psychosis over a four-year follow-up, and to identify potential clinical markers of mood/psychotic episodes outside of the postpartum period. Methods: One hundred and six women with a diagnosis of first-onset mania or psychosis during the postpartum period were included in this prospective longitudinal study. Women were categorized into either (1) recurrence of non-postpartum mood/psychotic episodes or (2) mania/psychosis limited to the postpartum period. We summarize the longitudinal course of the illness per group. We used a logistic regression model to identify clinical predictors of recurrence of mood/psychotic episodes outside of the postpartum period. Results: Over two thirds of the women included in this study did not have major psychiatric episodes outside of the postpartum period during follow-up. The overall recurrence rate of mood/psychotic episodes outside the postpartum period was ~ 32%. Of these women, most transitioned to a bipolar disorder diagnosis. None of the women fulfilled diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia or schizophreniform disorder. No clinical markers significantly predicted recurrence outside of the postpartum period. Conclusions: For the majority of women with first-onset postpartum psychosis, the risk of illness was limited to the period after childbirth. For the remaining women, postpartum psychosis was part of a mood/psychotic disorder with severe non-postpartum recurrence, mainly in the bipolar spectrum. No clinical predictors for risk of severe episodes outside the postpartum period emerged. Our findings add to previous evidence suggesting a fundamental link between postpartum psychosis and bipolar disorder, which may represent two distinct diagnoses within the same spectrum
Mother-to-Infant Bonding in Women with Postpartum Psychosis and Severe Postpartum Depression: A Clinical Cohort Study
Mother-to-infant bonding is important for long-term child development. The aim of this study was to investigate bonding in women admitted to a Mother and Baby Unit with postpartum depression (PD, n = 64) and postpartum psychosis (PP, n = 91). Participants completed the Postpartum Bonding Questionnaire (PBQ), the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) and the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) weekly during admission. At admission, 57.1% of women with PD had impaired bonding, compared to only 17.6% of women with PP (p-value < 0.001). At discharge, only 18.2% of women with PD and 5.9% of women with PP still experienced impaired bonding (p-value = 0.02). There was a strong association between decrease of depressive and manic symptoms and improved bonding over an eight-week admission period. In a small group of women (5.7%) impaired bonding persisted despite being in remission of their psychiatric disorder. The results from our study show that impaired bonding is a more present and evidently severe problem in postpartum depression but not so much in postpartum psychosis. Treatment of depressive symptoms will improve bonding in almost all women, but clinicians should assess if impaired bonding is still present after remission because for a small group special care and treatment focused on bonding might be required
Bipolar episodes after reproductive events in women with bipolar I disorder
Background: Women with bipolar I disorder are at high risk for severe episodes after childbirth, but there is no study that provides an overview on bipolar episode risk both during pregnancy and after childbirth, miscarriage and induced abortion. The aim of this study was to determine the episode risk during all pregnancy outcomes subdivided by first and subsequent pregnancies. Methods: Participants were 436 women with bipolar I disorder from the Dutch Bipolar Cohort, having 919 pregnancies of which 762 resulted in a live childbirth, 118 ended in a miscarriage and 39 ended in induced abortion. Women reported on the occurrence of manic or depressed episodes during the perinatal period. Information about medication use was obtained by questionnaires. Results: Episode risk was 5.2% during pregnancy, and 30.1% in the postpartum period, with a peak in the early postpartum period. Risk of an episode was highest after live birth (34.4%), and lower after miscarriage (15.2%) and induced abortion (27.8%). Women with an episode during pregnancy or postpartum were less likely to have a second child compared to women with an uneventful first pregnancy (cOR=0.34; 95%CI: 0.22-0.51; p<0.001); if they had a second child their risk of an episode was significantly elevated with a subsequent pregnancy (cOR=6.17; 95%CI: 3.64-10.45; p<0.001). Limitations: Retrospective cross-sectional design with assessment (partial) through self-report in a homogeneous population. Conclusions: Women with bipolar I disorder have a six times higher risk of an episode after delivery compared to during pregnancy, therefore preventive strategies are particularly important immediately after delivery.</p