Cavanna, Andrea Eugenio and Cavanna, Stefano and Bertero, Luca and Robertson, Mary May (2009) Depression in women with epilepsy: clinical and neurobiological aspects. Functional Neurology; New Trends in Interventional Neurosciences, 24 (2). pp. 83-87. ISSN 1971-3274
PDF
portiere.pdf - Published Version Restricted to Repository staff only Download (501kB) |
Abstract
Patients affected by epilepsy show a considerably higher incidence of depression compared with the general population. Since women are twice as likely as men to suffer from depression, female gender could be considered a major risk factor for developing this condition. Converging lines of evidence suggest that sex hormones, which are known to contribute to remodelling the hippocampus, play a pivotal role in both epilepsy and depression. In women, the role of sex hormone levels may be more important because of their physiological cyclic fluctuations. Oestrogens, more than other ovarian hormones, show an effect similar to antidepressant drugs by stimulating hippocampal synaptogenesis, thus exerting a protective role against seizures as well. This paper reviews the current knowledge on the neurobiological basis of depression in women with epilepsy. The emerging picture informs therapeutic strategies to improve the clinical management of this common comorbidity
Actions (login required)
View Item |