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Journal article

Early Life Trauma, Emotion Dysregulation and Hormonal Sensitivity Across Female Reproductive Life Events

Abstract

Purpose of ReviewTo explore the relationship between early life trauma, hormonal sensitivity, and psychiatric disorders across female-reproductive life events, with a focus on the neurobiological mechanisms.Recent FindingsChildhood trauma significantly increases the risk of subsequent mood disorders during periods of intense hormonal fluctuation such as premenstrual, pregnancy, postpartum, and perimenopause. Neurobiological changes resulting from early trauma influence emotion regulation, which emerges as a key predisposing, exacerbating, and perpetuating factor to hormonal sensitivity and subsequent psychiatric symptoms. We identified altered stress response and allopregnanolone imbalance, bias in cognitive processing of emotions, neuroimage correlates and sleep disturbances as potential underlying neurobiological mechanisms.SummaryThis review integrates cumulative findings supporting a theoretical framework linking early life trauma to hormonal sensitivity and mood disorders. We propose that some women might be more susceptible to such hormonal fluctuations because of emotion dysregulation following significant early life trauma.

Authors

Tonon AC; Ramos-Lima LF; Kuhathasan N; Frey BN

Journal

Current Psychiatry Reports, Vol. 26, No. 10, pp. 530–542

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

October 1, 2024

DOI

10.1007/s11920-024-01527-y

ISSN

1523-3812

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