ACTA ENDOCRINOLOGICA (BUC)

The International Journal of Romanian Society of Endocrinology / Registered in 1938

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Year Volume Issue First page
10.4183/aeb.
Author
Title
Abstract/Title
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  • Letter to the Editor

    Trifu S, Popescu A, Dragoi AM, Trifu AI

    Thyroid Hormones as a Third Line of Augmentation Medication in Treatment-Resistant Depression

    Acta Endo (Buc) 2020 16(2): 256-261 doi: 10.4183/aeb.2020.256

    Abstract
    Introduction. Clinical or subclinical hypothyroidism dictates the severity of depressive episodes and more frequently overlaps psychotic phenomenology. There are also major depressive episodes resistant to treatment in patients with euthyroidism, in which supplementation of antidepressant medication with thyroid hormones is beneficial. Material. Systematization of meta-analyses from perspectives: hypothyroidism and depression, autoimmune and depression pathology, gestational and puerperal pathology in association with hormonal and dispositional changes, presentation of therapeutic schemes. Results. Hypothyroidism is more commonly comorbid with major depression in women. It associates the need for hospitalizations, psychotic phenomenology, resistance to treatment, somatic comorbidities. Autoimmune pathology is associated with depression and requires thorough investigation. A possible genetic candidate for thyroid dysfunction is the DIO1 gene. FT4 may be a predictor, but the combination of FT4 + TBG measured during the prenatal period has a higher prognostic power for a future depressive episode. Conclusion. The article presents psychiatric medication schemes that combine antidepressants and antipsychotics of various classes with other enhancers, an important role going back to step three, which includes thyroid hormones, mainly T3. The doses used are smaller than the amount of endogenous production of T3 daily, with a small risk of inducing clinical hyperthyroidism.
  • Letter to the Editor

    Trifu S

    Neuroendocrine Insights into Burnout Syndrome

    Acta Endo (Buc) 2019 15(3): 404-405 doi: 10.4183/aeb.2019.404

    Abstract
    Debates flow in the medical and psychological field about burnout symptoms: from considering it as a distinct illness, a separate entity or correlated with physiological changes and/or job-related reaction. Seen as a form of depression, the researches are investigating the correlations between various changes in the normal human body functioning, environmental and job lever / implications. The following pages refer to the recent studies of neuroendocrine indicators involved in burnout. It is known that the endocrine system is highly interrelated with the immune and neural systems, the neuro-immuno-endocrine axis is subject to clear biphasic changes in the acute and chronic phases of a critical illness, most likely reflecting a beneficial adaptation.
  • Actualities in medicine

    Trifu S, Vladuti A, Popescu A

    Neuroendocrine Aspects of Pregnancy and Postpartum Depression

    Acta Endo (Buc) 2019 15(3): 410-415 doi: 10.4183/aeb.2019.410

    Abstract
    Introduction. Ties between the endocrine system and mental health are undeniably a consistent point of interest in modern day medicine. Furthermore, mental disturbances due to hormonal changes following childbirth have been mentioned in medical literature since Hippocrates. Considering the dramatic endocrine, paracrine and autocrine changes that occur during gestation, labour and postnatal phase, hormonal theories are not to be ignored in the treatment of postpartum disorders. Results. Reproductive hormones are known to modulate behavioural, emotional and cognitive response, therefore rapid changes in estradiol and progesterone plasma concentrations during pregnancy and labour create a vulnerable terrain leading towards postpartum disorders. New research shows that women suffering from postpartum disorders have abnormal neural responses, suggesting a neuroendocrine explanation for postpartum syndromes. Conclusion. To facilitate further research in this area, we present new information on several hormonal interactions and the psychiatric response involved in pregnancy and labour, offering an interdisciplinary outlook on pregnancy and postpartum disorders. There is enough evidence to suggest that estradiol, progesterone, oxytocin, cortisol and thyroid hormones are some of many hormones involved in postpartum syndromes and tackling their perinatal imbalance with pharmacological substituents or antagonists could be useful as an adjuvant form of treatment in future patients.