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Journal Article

Citation

Barry JA, Moran E, Parekh HS, Morewood T, Thomas M, Hardiman PJ. J. Obstet. Gynaecol. 2014; 34(7): 605-610.

Affiliation

Institute for Women's Health, University College London , London , UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/01443615.2014.901302

PMID

25226401

Abstract

This study tested the hypothesis that women with higher prolactin feel more hostility, anger and aggression. A total of 66 women with moderate fertility problems were grouped into the 50% who had the highest and the 50% who had the lowest levels of prolactin. Levels of hostility, aggression and anger were compared. Women with higher prolactin levels did not report significantly increased hostility. After Bonferroni correction, women with lower prolactin showed non-significantly increased scores on two measures of state anger, and on a measure of trait temper. When comparing those with the highest and lowest 20% of prolactin levels, those with lower prolactin had non-significantly higher scores on trait temper and outward expression of anger, and non-significantly lower scores for control of anger. Although non-significant, these findings run counter to those of earlier studies on this topic. Implications for future research and patient care are discussed.


Language: en

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