1. Mood changes after delivery: role of the serotonin transporter gene.
- Author
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Sanjuan, J., Martin-Santos, R., Garcia-Esteve, L., Carot, J. M., Guillamat, R., Gutierrez-Zotes, A., Gornemann, I., Canellas, F., Baca-Garcia, E., Jover, M., Navines, R., Valles, V., Vilella, E., de Diego, Y., Castro, J. A., Ivorra, J. L., Gelabert, E., Guitart, M., Labad, A., and Mayoral, F.
- Subjects
SEROTONIN ,TRYPTOPHAN ,MOOD (Psychology) ,POSTPARTUM depression ,GENOTYPE-environment interaction ,GENETIC transformation - Abstract
Background: Polymorphic variations in the serotonin transporter gene (5-HTT) moderate the depressogenic effects of tryptophan depletion. After childbirth there is a sharp reduction in brain tryptophan availability, thus polymorphic variations in 5-HTT may play a similar role in the post-partum period.Aims: To study the role of 5-HTT polymorphic variations in mood changes after delivery.Method: One thousand, eight hundred and four depression-free Spanish women were studied post-partum. We evaluated depressive symptoms at 2-3 days, 8 weeks and 32 weeks post-partum. We used diagnostic interview to confirm major depression for all probable cases. Based on two polymorphisms of 5-HTT (5-HTTLPR and STin2 VNTR), three genotype combinations were created to reflect different levels of 5-HTT expression.Results: One hundred and seventy-three women (12.7%) experienced major depression during the 32-week post-partum period. Depressive symptoms were associated with the high-expression 5-HTT genotypes in a dose-response fashion at 8 weeks post-partum, but not at 32 weeks.Conclusions: High-expression 5-HTT genotypes may render women more vulnerable to depressive symptoms after childbirth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
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