AI Article Synopsis

  • Women with PMS experience emotional challenges linked to the HPA axis, ANS, and CNS, prompting a study on the psychological and physiological differences in college students with and without PMS.
  • The research involved 33 PMS students and 24 healthy peers participating in emotion-inducing experiments, measuring their stress response through various physiological markers such as salivary cortisol and heart rate variability.
  • Findings indicated that PMS students had lower cortisol levels and unique EEG patterns compared to healthy students, suggesting different nervous system responses to emotional stimuli, particularly in relation to anger and sadness.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Women with premenstrual syndrome (PMS) suffer heavily from emotional problems, the pathogenesis of which is believed to be related to the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, autonomic nervous system (ANS) and central nervous system (CNS). We took into account all 3 aspects to observed the psychological, physiological and biochemical correlations under anger and sadness in college students with and without PMS.

Methods: 33 students with PMS and 24 healthy students participated in the emotion induction experiment, and were required to fill out self-report scales. Their salivary cortisol (SCort), skin conductivity level (SCL), heart rate variability (HRV), blood pressure (BP) and electroencephalogram (EEG) data were collected at the resting stage and 10-15 minutes after each video.

Results: Compared to healthy controls, students with PMS showed lower SCort level and higher VLF at rest, and no statistic difference in activities of ANS and HPA axis after emotional videos, but different results in EEG in all conditions. The decreases in SBP during angry video, SCort after angry and neutral videos, and increases in θ band power during sad video were moderately correlated with increases in PMS score. No intergroup differences were found in self-report emotions.

Discussion: Students with PMS had lower activity of HPA axis and possibly higher activity of PNS at rest, and different response patterns in CNS in all conditions. Several EEG frequencies, especially θ band, in specific encephalic regions during emotional videos, as well as declined HPA activities in dealing with angry and neutral stressors, in which γ activity in frontal lobe may play a role, showed moderate correlations with more severe PMS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10463732PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1228276DOI Listing

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