From Harvard Medical School, Department of Psychiatry, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA (Drs. Schildkrout and Raj); Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada (Dr. MacGillivray); Sheppard Pratt and University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD (Dr. Lauterbach).
Harv Rev Psychiatry. 2024 Jul 1;32(4):133-139. doi: 10.1097/HRP.0000000000000402.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES AFTER PARTICIPATING IN THIS CME ACTIVITY, READERS SHOULD BE BETTER ABLE TO: • Describe how the symptoms of dysphoric milk ejection reflex (D-MER) affect nursing patients.• Discuss how physicians, psychologists, and clinicians can support their patients experiencing D-MER.
Dysphoric milk ejection reflex (D-MER) is characterized by a sudden onset of profoundly negative emotions that are temporally linked to milk letdown when breastfeeding or pumping breast milk. These affective experiences have no psychological precipitants and only last for minutes. D-MER is relatively underappreciated in the physician-oriented medical literature, although there are important clinical and public health consequences when a nursing parent experiences unwanted, negative emotions paired with breastfeeding. D-MER can undermine the parent's confidence and may affect bonding with their infant; it may also contribute to weaning earlier than planned. It is especially important for psychiatrists and other health care professionals who may be called upon to evaluate postpartum patients or nursing parents to be knowledgeable about D-MER. This perspective article aims to provide information about D-MER to the psychiatric and broader medical communities, and to underscore the need for additional research on this topic. Drawing on a literature search, the article first traces historical recognition of D-MER as a clinical entity, then summarizes the clinical characteristics of D-MER and recommends an assessment and management approach that emphasizes psychoeducation. The article also discusses factors that have contributed to the underappreciation of this condition, outlines gaps in our understanding, and suggests next steps for epidemiological and clinical research. D-MER is likely a neuroendocrine condition with psychiatric manifestations. Given that it is episodic but with predictable timing, this condition presents a unique opportunity for scientific investigation.
学习目标 在参与本次 CME 活动后,读者应能够: • 描述不愉快的奶射反射(D-MER)的症状如何影响哺乳患者。• 讨论医生、心理学家和临床医生如何支持他们经历 D-MER 的患者。
不愉快的奶射反射(D-MER)的特征是突然出现强烈的负面情绪,与母乳喂养或泵奶时的奶射有时间关联。这些情感体验没有心理诱因,仅持续数分钟。尽管当哺乳父母经历不想要的、与母乳喂养相关的负面情绪时,会产生重要的临床和公共卫生后果,但在以医生为导向的医学文献中,D-MER 相对未得到充分重视。D-MER 会削弱父母的信心,并可能影响与婴儿的联系;它也可能导致提前断奶。对于精神科医生和其他卫生保健专业人员来说,了解 D-MER 尤为重要,因为他们可能需要评估产后患者或哺乳父母。这篇观点文章旨在向精神科和更广泛的医学社区提供有关 D-MER 的信息,并强调需要对此主题进行更多研究。本文通过文献检索,首先追溯了 D-MER 作为一种临床实体的历史认识,然后总结了 D-MER 的临床特征,并建议采用强调心理教育的评估和管理方法。文章还讨论了导致这种情况未被充分重视的因素,概述了理解上的差距,并为流行病学和临床研究提出了下一步建议。D-MER 可能是一种具有精神表现的神经内分泌疾病。鉴于它是发作性的,但具有可预测的时间,这种情况为科学研究提供了一个独特的机会。