This study investigated the diurnal output of saliva cortisol in women with symptoms of depression postnatally. Twenty-one depressed and 30 non-depressed women at 7.5 weeks postpartum, and 21 non-perinatal controls, collected saliva at waking, 30 min, and 3 and 12h postwaking. Women who were not depressed postnatally showed a pattern of cortisol secretion over the day similar to non-perinatal controls. There was a significant difference in diurnal pattern between postnatally depressed and postnatally non-depressed women, due to a difference in the first two time points (waking and +30 min): compared to the other two groups who each had a significant increase in cortisol levels from waking to +30 min, the depressed women had significantly higher cortisol levels at waking and no increase at +30 min. The lack of a morning rise in the depressed women is similar to that reported for posttraumatic stress disorder and chronic fatigue syndrome and may reflect a response, in vulnerable women, to the marked cortisol withdrawal that occurs after delivery.
Linking 24-hour movement behaviour guidelines to core symptoms and school engagement of youth with moderate/severe ADHD
Li, J., Chen, Y., Herold, F., Logan, N. E., Brown, D., Haegele, J. A., Zhang, Z., Taylor, A., Dastamooz, S., Geber, M., Kramer, A. F., Owen, N., Gao, Y., & Zou, L. (2025). Linking 24-hour movement behaviour guidelines to core symptoms and school engagement of youth with moderate/severe ADHD. Journal of Affective Disorders, 372, 422-430 URL