Abstract
Women experience a high prevalence of mood and anxiety disorders, and comorbidity of mood and anxiety disorders is highly prevalent. Both mood and anxiety disorders disturb sleep, attention and, thereby, cognitive function. They result in a variety of somatic complaints. The mood disorder continuum includes minor depression, dysthymia, major depression and bipolar disorder. Chronobiological disorders, such as seasonal affective disorder as well as premenstrual dysphoric disorder, occur in some women, with comorbid seasonal affective disorder and premenstrual dysphoric disorder in just under half of these individuals Citation. Early life experience, heritability, gender, other psychiatric illness, stress and trauma all interact dynamically in the development of mood and anxiety disorders. The epidemiology, nomenclature and clinical diagnostic issues of these illnesses in midlife woman are reviewed.
Notes
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Data from Citation[57]. Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permssion, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).
Used with permission, ©www.afwh.org (2007).