Taylor, Alyx, Glover, Vivette, Marks, Maureen et al. · Psychoneuroendocrinology · 2009 · DOI
This study looked at how stress hormone (cortisol) levels change throughout the day in women with depression after having a baby, compared to women without postpartum depression and non-pregnant women. The researchers found that depressed women had unusually high cortisol levels when they woke up and didn't show the normal increase in cortisol that typically happens 30 minutes after waking, which is similar to patterns seen in chronic fatigue syndrome.
This study is significant for ME/CFS research because it identifies a specific cortisol dysregulation pattern (blunted morning cortisol rise) that is shared between postpartum depression and chronic fatigue syndrome. Understanding this common neuroendocrine marker may help researchers elucidate shared mechanisms between these conditions and identify potential biomarkers for post-infectious or post-stress illnesses characterized by HPA axis dysfunction.
This study does not prove that cortisol dysregulation causes postpartum depression or ME/CFS, only that the pattern is associated with postpartum depressive symptoms at a single time point. It does not establish whether the blunted cortisol response is a cause, consequence, or merely a correlate of depression. The findings are specific to postpartum women and may not generalize to other ME/CFS populations or cortisol patterns in non-reproductive contexts.
About the PEM badge: “PEM required” means post-exertional malaise was an explicit required diagnostic criterion for participant inclusion in this study — not that PEM was studied, observed, or discussed. Studies using criteria that do not require PEM (e.g. Fukuda, Oxford) are tagged “PEM not required”. How the atlas works →
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