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T3 is linked to stress-associated reduction of prolactin in lactating women

helvella profile image
helvellaAdministrator
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Seemingly on cue as yet another T3 issue! One that would appear to have passed by the endocrinologists and obstetricians for all these years…

J Neuroendocrinol. 2021 Jun 17;e13003.

doi: 10.1111/jne.13003. Online ahead of print.

T3 is linked to stress-associated reduction of prolactin in lactating women

Safia Bibi 1 , Mohsin Shah 1 , Muhammad Omar Malik 1 , Ki Ann Goosens 2

Affiliations

• PMID: 34241933

• DOI: 10.1111/jne.13003

Abstract

The relationship between stress responses and lactation is bidirectional. Breastfeeding confers many benefits to maternal health, including attenuated hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis responsiveness to stress. However, increased stress burden can impair lactation. The mechanisms that underlie these relationships are poorly understood. The present study aimed to compare breastfeeding habits, as well as subjective and objective measures of stress, in employed and non-employed lactating women and assess the relationships between these measures and prolactin (PRL), thyroid hormones (thyroid-stimulating hormone, triiodothyronine [T3] and thyroxine), vasopressin and cortisol levels. A dexamethasone suppression test was also administered to determine the sensitivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis to negative-feedback. We report that lactating employed women had lower breastfeeding rates and lower PRL than lactating non-employed women. They also had a significantly higher stress burden, indicated by elevations in blood pressure and evening cortisol, relative to lactating non-employed women. In regression analyses that controlled for feeding modality and breastfeeding duration, we found these factors differentially affected PRL in the two groups and there were significant differences in PRL across groups that were not accounted for by these factors. A mediation regression analysis suggested that group differences in PRL were best explained by differences in T3 and income levels, rather than breastfeeding duration or other variables. Our data fit a speculative model in which elevated maternal stress increases cortisol, which suppresses T3, leading to decreased PRL. The decreases in PRL are associated with higher rates of bottlefeeding, which may further contribute to decreased PRL.

Keywords: HPA axis; breastfeeding; prolactin; stress; thyroid.

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/342...

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jimh111 profile image
jimh111

Another possibility. TRH stimulates both TSH and prolactin. If TRH is reduced due to stress, illness or depression it will lower PRH. It will also lower TSH (and produce TSH with lower bioactivity). This will lead to reduced thyroidal secretion of T3 and reduced T4 to T3 conversion.

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