Gender Differences in Mood and Anxiety Disorders: From Bench to Bedside: American Psychiatric Press Review of Psychiatry, vol. 18
Moreover, one of the areas with greater activation in women compared with men during induced sadness was the mesial prefrontal cortex, an area that has been shown to be hypoactive in patients with depression.…Although they represent only indirect evidence, these findings suggest that women may have some vulnerability to depression based on differential functioning of the limbic system. (p. 23)
A few clinical studies have yielded findings consistent with these data, suggesting that estrogen can blunt anxiety. Subclinical anxiety symptoms are reduced in postmenopausal women receiving estrogen replacement therapy…and estrogen appears to blunt autonomic (heart rate and blood pressure) responses to stress in postmenopausal women.…There have been no clinical studies of the effects of estrogen treatment in patients with clinically diagnosed anxiety disorders. (p. 63)
An early investigation evaluated the effects of estrogen versus placebo on personality and functional impairment in older women (ages 60–91 years).…The Hospital Adjustment Scale (HAS)…was used to measure changes in interpersonal relationships and functioning, self-care, social responsibilities, and activities. Compared with women assigned to placebo, women assigned to estrogen improved on all measures and sustained better functioning over time. However, it was not clear whether the benefit seen with estrogen was secondary to estrogen’s mood-elevating properties or attributable to its salutary effects on cognitive functioning. (p. 113)
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