Significant mood disorders should not be solely attributed to menopause, as other factors may contribute to hormone-sensitive neurotransmitter fluctuations. — Whalespan
Significant mood disorders should not be solely attributed to menopause, as other factors may contribute to hormone-sensitive neurotransmitter fluctuations.
⚠ High risk
The headline is broadly defensible, but the qualifications matter. Effect sizes vary by population, the strongest claims rest on shorter trials, and credible voices push back on how it's typically framed.
◐PARTIALLYSUPPORTED
⚠
High-risk intervention — consult a physician before acting.Drug-drug interactions, dose-dependence, and screening contraindications apply.
“I'm careful to say that like a significant mood disorder is shouldn't be attributed to menopause it's a vulnerable time because of everything else that's also going on so I watch carefully for mislabeling mental health issues in this time frame which is it's also a vulnerable time and it it may have to do with the hormonal changes too actually right the brain is the neurotransmitters are sensitive to fluctuations in hormones so there may be mood changes and there may be concominant mental disorders that sometimes emerge that's a caveat”