Postpartum mood disorders: clinical perspectives

Author affiliations
  • The Ohio State University ROR

Journal of Women's Health, 6(4), 421-434, 1997

DOI 10.1089/jwh.1997.6.421 PMID 9279830

Abstract

Mood disorders are common in women. A prepregnancy personal history of mood disorder (bipolar or major depression), premenstrual syndrome, or (possibly) postpartum blues places a woman at high risk for a postpartum exacerbation of symptoms. Untreated or unrecognized postpartum mood disorders can lead to serious psychologic and social consequences, in some cases even leading to suicide or infanticide. Women at risk for postpartum mood disorders need to be referred for psychiatric consultation before pregnancy and parturition. Informed, professional collaboration offers the best opportunities for prevention, as well as the earliest recognition and treatment of emergent symptoms.

Topics

postpartum mood disorders clinical perspectives, postpartum depression risk factors history bipolar disorder, premenstrual syndrome risk factor postpartum depression, postpartum blues progression to major depression, psychiatric consultation before pregnancy mood disorder, postpartum psychosis infanticide suicide prevention, prepregnancy mood disorder recurrence after delivery, postpartum exacerbation bipolar depression management, Pariser Nasrallah postpartum mood disorders, early recognition treatment postpartum psychiatric symptoms
PMID 9279830 9279830 DOI 10.1089/jwh.1997.6.421 10.1089/jwh.1997.6.421

Cite this article

Pariser, S. F., Nasrallah, H. A., & Gardner, D. K. (1997). Postpartum mood disorders: clinical perspectives. *Journal of women's health*, *6*(4), 421-434. https://doi.org/10.1089/jwh.1997.6.421