Severe pregnancy nausea is a major physical and mental health risk, highlighting the need for stronger cross-disciplinary care.
A recent study has revealed a significant connection between hyperemesis gravidarum—an intense and debilitating form of nausea experienced during pregnancy—and the risk of depression. ()
The research found that women who suffered from this severe pregnancy-related nausea were not only more likely to experience depressive symptoms prior to conception, but also faced a higher likelihood of developing depression after giving birth.
Moreover, these women often received a diagnosis of postpartum depression earlier than those who did not experience hyperemesis gravidarum, highlighting the condition’s deeper impact on long-term mental health.
What Makes Hyperemesis Gravidarum One of the Most Severe and Disruptive Pregnancy Conditions?
Hyperemesis gravidarum is associated with severe nausea and vomiting during pregnancy that prevent a person from eating and drinking normally and make everyday life extremely difficult. It occurs in 0.3 to 3.6 percent of all pregnancies and is the most common cause of hospitalization in the first trimester of pregnancy.
In addition to the physical effects, severe nausea in pregnancy carries a considerable psychosocial burden. However, information on its association with psychiatric illness has been limited so far.
Researchers at the University of Turku conducted a Finnish nationwide register-based study that found an association between severe nausea during pregnancy and depression.
This is the first time this association has been identified, and it was also found to be bidirectional, meaning that severe nausea during pregnancy is associated with depression both before and after the pregnancy.
Severe Nausea Linked to 5x Higher Pre-Pregnancy Depression Risk
The study analyzed register data from over 437,000 Finnish women from 2004 to 2017. The results show that 8.8 percent of women with severe nausea during pregnancy had depression before pregnancy, compared to 1.0 percent in the control group. This means that these women were more than five times as likely to experience depression before pregnancy.
In addition, they were also about 3.5 times more likely to develop new, previously undiagnosed depression after childbirth: 4.9 percent were diagnosed with a new-onset depression after childbirth, compared to 1.0 percent in the control group.
After giving birth, depression was also diagnosed earlier in women who had suffered from severe nausea during pregnancy compared to others. On average, depression was diagnosed 3.3 years after delivery in women with severe nausea during pregnancy, compared with an average of 4.5 years after delivery in their controls.
The study suggests that severe nausea during pregnancy and depression may have shared biological mechanisms. The findings highlight the importance of systematic psychiatric screening during and after pregnancy, and the need for a multidisciplinary approach to care.
“Our research shows that severe nausea in pregnancy is not only a physically stressful condition, but also a significant mental health risk factor. The results emphasize the need for improved collaboration between psychiatry, genecology, and primary care. Our aim is also to raise awareness and improve access to support for these patients,” says Doctoral Researcher Eeva Terävä-Utti from the University of Turku.
References:
- Association between hyperemesis gravidarum and depression: a national register-based controlled study in Finland – (https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S2215036625002718)
Source-Eurekalert