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Life

Stress warning for depressed mums-to-be

11 April 2007

TREATING women who become clinically depressed during pregnancy could prevent thousands of premature births.

Veronica O’Keane at the Institute of Psychiatry in London and her colleagues have found a link between clinical depression, levels of stress hormones and premature birth. They found that pregnant women suffering from severe depression had higher levels of the stress hormones cortisol and corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) in their blood than healthy women. They also found that pregnancies were shorter on average in the depressed women. Preterm delivery is the leading cause of infant illness and death.

“Depression is a major cause of preterm birth, and overstimulation of stress hormones is at…

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