Maternal separation: Does it hold the potential to model consequences of postpartum depression?

Dev Psychobiol

Division of Experimental and Molecular Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Preventive Medicine, LWL University Hospital, Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany.

Published: January 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The postpartum period is a critical time for women, with about 10%-15% at risk for postpartum depression (PPD), making it important to explore its causes and effects.
  • This review examines the maternal separation (MS) model in rodents as a potential tool to better understand the challenges faced by mothers suffering from PPD.
  • Findings show that MS alters various aspects of maternal behavior, hormone levels, and gene expression in rodents, aligning with symptoms seen in PPD, suggesting that this model could enhance our understanding of PPD in humans.

Article Abstract

The postpartum period is a sensitive time where women are especially vulnerable to develop postpartum depression (PPD), with 10%-15% of women affected. This review investigates whether the maternal separation (MS) paradigm in rodents holds the potential to help to understand mothers suffering from PPD. MS is a well-established stress model to investigate effects on infants, whereas effects on the dam are often overlooked. The database PubMed was searched for studies investigating effects of daily MS within the first weeks after parturition on dams in rats and mice and compared to findings in PPD mothers. MS was categorized as brief MS (5-45 min) with or without handling of pups and long MS (3-4 h and longer). MS alters maternal care, depressive-like behavior, anxiety, and aggression; leads to alterations in neuronal gene expression; and affects hormone and neurotransmitter levels similar to observations in PPD patients. Even though there are disparities between human and rodent mothers, with some results differing in directionality, as well as the reason for separation (self-induced in PPD, externally induced in MS), the overall effects found on neurobiological, hormonal, and behavioral levels mostly coincide. Thus, the MS paradigm can add relevant knowledge to existing PPD animal models, further advancing the study of PPD.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/dev.22219DOI Listing

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