University of Iowa, United States of America; Indiana University School of Medicine, United States of America.
University of Iowa, United States of America.
J Affect Disord. 2023 Mar 15;325:231-239. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2022.12.111. Epub 2023 Jan 4.
The perinatal period is increasingly recognized as a vulnerable time for the development and exacerbation of psychiatric symptoms. Research has often focused on perinatal depression, with much less information on perinatal anxiety. This study examined the psychometric structure of all internalizing (anxiety and mood disorder symptoms) in the perinatal period.
Participants were primarily community adults receiving prenatal care from an academic medical center (N = 246). Participants completed a structured clinical interview using the Interview for Mood and Anxiety Symptoms (IMAS) during pregnancy (28-32 weeks gestation) and the postpartum (6-8 weeks). Clinical interviews dimensionally assessed all current anxiety, mood, and obsessive-compulsive symptoms as well as lifetime psychiatric diagnoses.
Confirmatory factor analyses identified three latent factors onto which psychiatric symptoms loaded: Distress (depression, generalized anxiety, irritability, and panic symptoms), Fear (social anxiety, agoraphobia, specific phobia, and obsessive-compulsive symptoms), and Bipolar (mania and obsessive-compulsive symptoms) in both pregnancy and the postpartum. The fit statistics of the models indicated adequate to good fit in both models.
The IMAS is validated against the DSM-IV-TR rather than the DSM-5 and assessments of psychiatric symptoms were focused only on the current pregnancy.
A three-factor model consisting of Distress, Fear and Bipolar latent factors was the best-fitting model in pregnancy and the postpartum period and showed stability across time. The structure of internalizing symptoms has important implications for future perinatal research and can be utilized to guide treatment by highlighting which psychiatric symptoms may be most similar during the perinatal period.
围产期越来越被认为是发展和加重精神症状的脆弱时期。研究通常集中在围产期抑郁症上,而关于围产期焦虑症的信息则要少得多。本研究检查了围产期所有内化症状(焦虑和情绪障碍症状)的心理计量学结构。
参与者主要是从学术医疗中心接受产前护理的社区成年人(N=246)。参与者在妊娠(28-32 周妊娠)和产后(6-8 周)期间使用《心境与焦虑症状访谈》(IMAS)完成了一项结构化临床访谈。临床访谈从维度上评估了所有当前的焦虑、情绪和强迫症症状以及终生精神科诊断。
验证性因素分析确定了三个潜在因素,精神症状加载到这些因素上:痛苦(抑郁、广泛性焦虑、易怒和惊恐症状)、恐惧(社交焦虑、广场恐怖症、特定恐惧症和强迫症症状)以及双相情感障碍(躁狂和强迫症症状),这两个因素都存在于妊娠和产后。模型的拟合统计数据表明,两个模型的拟合度均为适度到良好。
IMAS 是根据 DSM-IV-TR 而不是 DSM-5 进行验证的,并且对精神症状的评估仅集中在当前妊娠上。
由痛苦、恐惧和双相情感障碍三个潜在因素组成的三因素模型是妊娠和产后最佳拟合模型,并且在时间上具有稳定性。内化症状的结构对未来围产期研究具有重要意义,并可通过突出围产期最相似的哪些精神症状来指导治疗。