Robert C. Daly
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Robert C. Daly.
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2003
Miki Bloch; Robert C. Daly; David R. Rubinow
This article reviews the literature regarding endocrine factors postulated or presumed to be relevant in postpartum depression (PPD), a condition affecting at least 10% of childbearing women. The phenomenology and epidemiology of PPD are also described. Data suggest that parturition-related endocrine changes are causally implicated in PPD in a vulnerable subgroup of women. More specifically, studies by our group and others suggest a role for changes in estradiol and progesterone in precipitating mood symptoms among women with PPD. The mechanisms underlying such differential sensitivities remain undetermined. Future directions for research are explored.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2003
Robert C. Daly; Tung Ping Su; Peter J. Schmidt; M. Pagliaro; David Pickar; David R. Rubinow
OBJECTIVE Despite widespread abuse of anabolic-androgenic steroids (AAS), the endocrine effects of supraphysiologic doses of these compounds remain unclear. We administered the AAS methyltestosterone (MT) to 20 normal volunteers in an in-patient setting, examined its effects on levels of pituitary-gonadal, -thyroid, and -adrenal hormones, and examined potential relationships between endocrine changes and MT-induced psychological symptoms. METHOD Subjects received MT (three days of 40 mg/day, then three days of 240 mg/day) or placebo in a fixed sequence with neither subjects nor raters aware of order. Samples were obtained at the ends of the baseline, high-dose MT and withdrawal phases. Potential relationships between hormonal changes and visual analog scale measured mood changes were examined. RESULTS Significant decreases in plasma levels of gonadotropins, gonadal steroids, sex hormone binding globulin, free T3 and T4, and thyroid binding globulin (Bonferroni t, p<0.01 for each) were seen during high-dose MT; free thyroxine and TSH increased during high-dose MT, with TSH increases reaching significance during withdrawal. No significant changes in pituitary-adrenal hormones were observed. Changes in free thyroxine significantly correlated with changes in aggressiveness (anger, violent feelings, irritability) (r=0.5,p=0.02) and changes in total testosterone correlated significantly with changes in cognitive cluster symptoms (forgetfulness, distractibility) (r=0.52,p=0.02). Hormonal changes did not correlate with plasma MT levels. CONCLUSIONS Acute high-dose MT administration acutely suppresses the reproductive axis and significantly impacts thyroid axis balance without a consistent effect on pituitary-adrenal hormones. Mood and behavioral effects observed during AAS use may in part reflect secondary hormonal changes.
Psychiatric Clinics of North America | 1999
Isabel T. Lagomasino; Robert C. Daly; Alan Stoudemire
Psychiatrists in the emergency department (ED) are often asked to evaluate patients with disturbances of affect, behavior, and cognition. The first and most crucial step in the evaluation process is to eliminate possible medical causes for a patient presenting psychiatric symptoms. Failure to detect and diagnose underlying medical disorders may result in significant and unnecessary morbidity and mortality.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2001
Robert C. Daly; Peter Schmidt; Candace L. Davis; Merry A. Danaceau; David R. Rubinow
BACKGROUND GABA receptor-modifying neurosteroids may play a role in premenstrual syndrome (PMS). The peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBR) both regulates the formation of neurosteroids and is, in animals, regulated by ovarian steroids. Alterations in PBR density have been observed in association with several psychiatric disorders. METHODS We examined the effects of gonadal steroids on lymphocytic PBR density in nine women with prospectively confirmed PMS and nine controls. PBR densities were measured during three pharmacologically controlled conditions: gonadotropin releasing hormone agonist (Lupron)-induced hypogonadism, Lupron plus estradiol, and Lupron plus progesterone replacement. Blood samples were obtained after six weeks of Lupron alone and after 3-4 weeks of estradiol and progesterone replacement. RESULTS No significant hormone state-related changes in PBR density were observed (ANOVA-R: phase-F(2,32)=1.5, P=0.2). Despite mood symptom development in the subjects with PMS, PBR density did not differ in women with PMS compared to controls across hormonal states (ANOVA-R: F(1,16)=0.6, P=0.4). CONCLUSIONS PBR densities are not altered in women with PMS and are not changed significantly by selective gonadal steroid administration. Changes in PBR density would not appear to underlie the differential sensitivity to the mood destabilizing effects of ovarian steroids in PMS.
Archives of General Psychiatry | 2005
Peter J. Schmidt; Robert C. Daly; Miki Bloch; Mark J. Smith; Merry A. Danaceau; Linda Simpson St. Clair; Jean H. Murphy; Nazli Haq; David R. Rubinow
Archives of General Psychiatry | 2001
Robert C. Daly; Tung-Ping Su; Peter J. Schmidt; David Pickar; Dennis L. Murphy; David R. Rubinow
American Journal of Psychiatry | 2006
Misty Richards; David R. Rubinow; Robert C. Daly; Peter J. Schmidt
American Journal of Psychiatry | 2003
Robert C. Daly; Merry A. Danaceau; David R. Rubinow; Peter J. Schmidt
Archive | 2015
Robert C. Daly; Tung-Ping Su; Peter J. Schmidt; David Pickar; Dennis L. Murphy; David R. Rubinow
Archives of General Psychiatry | 2001
Robert C. Daly; Peter J. Schmidt; Catherine A. Roca; David R. Rubinow