City
Epaper

‘Love hormone’ can fix mood changes in women with disturbed sleep

By IANS | Updated: July 13, 2025 18:01 IST

San Francisco, July 13 ‘Love hormone’ Oxytocin may play a protective role in mood disturbances triggered by sleep ...

Open in App

San Francisco, July 13 ‘Love hormone’ Oxytocin may play a protective role in mood disturbances triggered by sleep loss and hormonal shifts during key reproductive transitions like postpartum and menopause, say researchers.

Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School studied the combined impact of sleep interruption and estrogen suppression on mood and oxytocin levels in healthy premenopausal women.

Their findings suggest that oxytocin may help reduce the negative mood effects brought on by fragmented sleep, which is an often-overlooked consequence of reproductive transitions.

“We found that oxytocin levels rise in response to stress-related sleep disruption, and that women with higher oxytocin levels before disrupted sleep experienced less mood disturbance the next day,” said Irene Gonsalvez, associate psychiatrist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and instructor at Harvard Medical School in Boston.

These results point toward oxytocin as a potential biological buffer during periods of hormonal and emotional vulnerability.

Women frequently experience disrupted sleep during the postpartum and menopausal periods that are associated with sharp hormonal fluctuations.

Yet, these disturbances are often minimised or seen as routine inconveniences. The study provides new biological evidence that such sleep interruptions are linked to meaningful changes in emotional health, and that oxytocin may serve as an important protective factor.

In the study, 38 healthy premenopausal women completed two 5-night inpatient protocols: one during a natural hormonal state and another after estradiol suppression. After two nights of uninterrupted sleep, researchers fragmented participants’ sleep for three nights to simulate patterns commonly experienced during postpartum and menopause. Mood disturbance and oxytocin levels were assessed throughout.

Findings indicated that sleep interruption significantly increased both mood disturbance and oxytocin levels, and that higher oxytocin levels before sleep disruption were linked to reduced mood disturbance the following day. Higher incidences of mood disturbance associated with sleep disruptions were also linked to increased oxytocin levels the next day.

“Millions of women struggle with mood symptoms during reproductive transitions, yet treatments often focus narrowly on antidepressants or hormone therapy,” Gonsalvez said. “Understanding oxytocin’s potential as a natural mood modulator could help us better support women’s mental health during these times.”

The study was presented at ‘ENDO 2025’, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in San Francisco.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyS. Korea aims to enter mass production of humanoid robots in 2029

BusinessS. Korea aims to enter mass production of humanoid robots in 2029

International"He is learning, oil not a tool of leverage, India not vulnerable," Geopolitical expert David Goldwyn on Trump's India tariff strategy

NationalDelhi: Cab Driver Arrested for Masturbating While Driving With Female Student in Maurice Nagar

NationalUP govt sends relief supplies to flood-hit Himachal, 26 trucks reach Kangra

Health Realted Stories

HealthApple launches Watch Series 11 with BP monitoring, AirPods Pro 3 with heart rate sensing

HealthLife insurers post 6 pc rise in new business premiums in August

HealthInfant deaths dent on state's health services, says MP Dy CM Shukla

HealthGujarat emerges as best-performing state under ‘TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyan’

HealthJ&K: Free AYUSH awareness and health check-up camps organised, locals benefit from traditional treatment