Prolactin secretion during sleep: a comparison between depressed patients and healthy control subjects |
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Authors: | D B Jarrett J M Miewald I B Fedorka P Coble D J Kupfer J B Greenhouse |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, PA 15213. |
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Abstract: | Although several neuroendocrine abnormalities have been described in depressed patients, relatively little attention has been paid to the pattern of prolactin secretion during sleep. Sleep disturbances are frequently found in depressed patients, and the sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) typically shows significant changes in the first and last 100 min, when prolactin secretion frequently occurs. In this study, carefully defined inclusion criteria were used to ensure comparability in the quality of the sleep maintenance, so that the pattern of sleep-related prolactin secretion in a group of 26 depressed inpatients could be compared to that in a group of 20 healthy control subjects. Starting from sleep onset, the patients did not show any statistically significant difference in either the serum prolactin concentration or the pattern of integrated prolactin secretion relative to the control subjects. A statistically significant relationship between prolactin secretion and the REM-non-REM sleep cycle could not be demonstrated in these subjects. |
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