Perimenopause pp 246-254 | Cite as

Perimenopausal Depression

  • Peter J. Schmidt
  • Catherine A. Roca
  • David R. Rubinow
Part of the Serono Symposia USA book series (SERONOSYMP)

Abstract

The relationship between the perimenopause and mood disturbances is the source of myth and polemic. Our current lack of understanding of this relationship reflects the variable or inadequate definitions employed for both the perimenopause and depression. As well, it reflects the belief that if the perimenopause is not associated with mood changes in everyone, it must be relevant in no one. The literature is, nonetheless, replete with reports attributing mood and behavioral disturbances to the changes in reproductive hormones occurring during the perimenopause. In addition to early descriptions of perimenopausal neurasthenia (fatigue, insomnia, decreased concentration, anxiety, sadness), Maudsley and Kraepelin described a severe perimenopausal or involutional melancholia (1–4). In the ensuing decades, controversy raged regarding the existence of a perimenopausal depression that was distinct from depression occurring outside the context of the perimenopause. Influential studies by Weissman (5) and Winokur and Cadoret (6) provided arguments against involutional melancholia as a distinct entity. Largely as a consequence of these studies, involutional melancholia was eliminated from subsequent editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. As reviewed elsewhere (and in brief below), both conceptual and and methodologic problems underlie the certainty with which a relationship between the perimenopause and mood disturbances has been dismissed. In this chapter we pose several questions that may help define the possible relationship between mood changes and the perimenopause.

Keywords

Mood Disturbance Gonadal Steroid Mood Symptom Premenstrual Syndrome Perimenopausal Woman 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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Copyright information

© Springer-Verlarg New York, Inc. 1997

Authors and Affiliations

  • Peter J. Schmidt
  • Catherine A. Roca
  • David R. Rubinow

There are no affiliations available

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