Abstract
In recent years, a burgeoning field of research has focused on women's mental health and psychiatric conditions associated with perinatal and postpartum periods. An emerging trend points to the link between hormone fluctuations during pregnancy and postpartum that have immunologic consequences in cases of perinatal depression and postpartum psychosis. The transition to menopause (or “perimenopause”) has garnered comparatively less attention, but existing studies point to the influential interaction of hormonal and immune pathways. Moreover, the role of this cross talk in perturbing neural networks has been implicated in risk for cognitive decline, but relatively less work has focused on the depressed brain during perimenopause. This brief review brings a psychoneuroimmunology lens to depression during the perimenopausal period by providing an overview of existing knowledge and suggestions for future research to intertwine these bodies of work.
Published Version
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