PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

The brain's reaction to male odor shifts at puberty in children with gender dysphoria

2014-05-28
(Press-News.org) The brains of children with gender dysphoria react to androstadienone, a musky-smelling steroid produced by men, in a way typical of their biological sex, but after puberty according to their experienced gender, finds a study for the first time in the open-access journal Frontiers in Endocrinology.

Around puberty, the testes of men start to produce androstadienone, a breakdown product of testosterone. Men release it in their sweat, especially from the armpits. Its only known function is to work like a pheromone: when women smell androstadienone, their mood tends to improve, their blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing go up, and they may become aroused.

Previous studies have shown that, in heterosexual women, the brain region that responds most to androstadienone is the hypothalamus, which lies just above the brainstem and links the nervous system to the hormonal system. In men with gender dysphoria (formerly called gender identity disorder) – who are born as males, but behave as and identify with women, and want to change sex – the hypothalamus also reacts strongly to its odor. In contrast, the hypothalamus of heterosexual men hardly responds to it.

Girls without gender dysphoria before puberty already show a stronger reaction in the hypothalamus to androstadienone than boys, finds a new study by Sarah Burke and colleagues from the VU University Medical Center of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and the University of Liège, Belgium.

The researchers used neuroimaging to also show for the first time that in prepubescent children with gender dysphoria, the hypothalamus reacts to the smell of androstadienone in a way typical of their biological sex. Around puberty, its response shifts, and becomes typical of their experienced gender.

The reaction to the smell of androstadienone in the hypothalamus of 154 children and adolescents, including girls and boys, both before (7 to 11-year-old) and after puberty (15 to 16-year-old), of whom 74 had been diagnosed with gender dysphoria.

Results showed that the hypothalamus was more responsive to androstadienone in 7 to 11-year-old girls than in boys, both without gender dysphoria, although not yet as much as in adolescent girls. This means that the greater receptiveness of women to its odor already exists before puberty, either as an inborn difference or one that arises during early childhood.

Before puberty, the hypothalamus of boys with gender dysphoria hardly reacted to the odor, just as in other boys. But this changed in the 15 to 16-year-olds: the hypothalamus of adolescent boys with gender dysphoria now lit up as much as in heterosexual women, while the other adolescent boys still did not show any reaction. Adolescent girls with gender dysphoria showed the same reaction to androstadienone in their hypothalamus as is typical for heterosexual men.

These results suggest that as children with gender dysphoria grow up, their brain naturally undergoes a partial rewiring, to become more similar to the brain of the opposite sex – so corresponding to their experienced gender.

INFORMATION:

Note to Editors

1. For a copy of the embargoed paper, please contact Gozde Zorlu: press@frontiersin.org

2. Article title: Hypothalamic response to the chemo-signal androstadienone in gender dysphoric children and adolescents
Journal: Frontiers in Endocrinology

For online articles, please include a link to the article, which will appear on the following active URL: http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fendo.2014.00060/abstract

3. Contacts

Gozde Zorlu
Communications Manager
Frontiers
Switzerland
E-mail: press@frontiersin.org

4. About Frontiers

Frontiers is a community-driven open-access publisher and research networking platform. Launched and run by scientists since 2007, Frontiers empowers researchers to advance the way science is peer-reviewed, evaluated, published, communicated, and shared in the digital era. Frontiers drives innovations in peer-review, article level metrics, post publication review, democratic evaluation, research networking and a growing ecosystem of open-science tools. Frontiers joined the Nature Publishing Group family in 2013. The "Frontiers in" journal series has published 20,000 peer-reviewed articles across 46 journals, which receive 6 million monthly views, and are supported by over 140,000 editors, reviewers and authors worldwide. For more information, visit: http://www.frontiersin.org


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mount Sinai researchers lead committee to define the clinical course of multiple sclerosis

2014-05-28
(NEW YORK – May 28) Accurate clinical course descriptions (phenotypes) of multiple sclerosis (MS) are important for communication, prognostication, design and recruitment for clinical trials, and treatment decision-making. Researchers at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, part of the International Committee on Clinical Trials of MS, collaborated to re-examine the standardized MS clinical course descriptions originally published in 1996 and recommend refined phenotype descriptions that include improved clinical descriptive terminology, MRI and other imaging techniques, ...

NASA IceBridge concludes Arctic field campaign

NASA IceBridge concludes Arctic field campaign
2014-05-28
Researchers with NASA's Operation IceBridge have completed another successful Arctic field campaign. On May 23, NASA's P-3 research aircraft left Thule Air Base, Greenland, and returned to Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia marking the end of 11 weeks of polar research. During this campaign, researchers collected data on Arctic sea and land ice – both repeating measurements on rapidly changing areas and expanding coverage into new, unsurveyed regions. The mission also released two sea ice data products and provided a professional development opportunity for three science ...

International collaboration highlights new mechanism explaining how cancer cells spread

International collaboration highlights new mechanism explaining how cancer cells spread
2014-05-28
DALLAS – May 28, 2014 – UT Southwestern Medical Center cancer researchers have identified a protein critical to the spread of deadly cancer cells and determined how it works, paving the way for potential use in diagnosis and eventually possible therapeutic drugs to halt or slow the spread of cancer. The protein, Aiolos, is produced by normal blood cells but commits a kind of "identity theft" of blood cells when expressed by cancer cells, allowing the latter to metastasize, or spread, to other parts of the body. Metastatic cancer cells have the ability to break free from ...

Suspect strep throat? Re-check negative rapid test results with lab culture

Suspect strep throat? Re-check negative rapid test results with lab culture
2014-05-28
Clinical guidelines conflict on testing teens and adults whose symptoms point to a possible strep throat. A chief contention is whether negative tests results from a rapid analysis of a throat swab, done in a doctor's office, should be confirmed through a follow-up laboratory culture. The rapid test detects certain antigens, one of the body's efforts to fight off strep bacteria. Attempting to grow bacteria from a throat specimen double checks for the presence or absence of Group A Streptococcus bacteria, as well as a few other bacterial infections. A study published ...

Negative social interactions increase hypertension risk in older adults

2014-05-28
PITTSBURGH—Keeping your friends close and your enemies closer may not be the best advice if you are 50 or older. New research from Carnegie Mellon University's Rodlescia Sneed and Sheldon Cohen shows that unpleasant or demanding interpersonal encounters increase hypertension risk among older adults. Published in the American Psychological Association's journal Health Psychology, the study provides some of the first concrete evidence that negative social interactions not only influence psychological well-being but also physical health – in this case, blood pressure ...

T cell repertoire changes predictive of anti-CTLA-4 cancer immunotherapy outcome revealed

2014-05-28
Sequenta, Inc. today announced publication of a study done in collaboration with researchers from UCSF and UCLA that used the company's proprietary LymphoSIGHT™ immune repertoire sequencing platform to investigate the effects of anti-CTLA-4 antibody on the number and types of T cells present in a patient's blood. The results, which appear in the May 28 issue of Science Translational Medicine, shed light on the mechanism of action of this type of cancer immunotherapy and suggest that immune repertoire sequencing could be used to predict which patients will have improved ...

Study: Amphetamines can delay exhaustion during exercise in the heat -- at a cost

2014-05-28
Indiana University researchers put male rats to the test to determine the role amphetamines play when used in conjunction with exercise. When people or animals exercise in the heat, exhaustion is a safety gauge telling the body it is time to stop. Exhaustion occurs when the body's core temperature reaches a potentially dangerous point. The use of amphetamines is banned in many sports because they increase time to exhaustion. What they found: Amphetamines can delay exhaustion during exercise in the heat by increasing the temperature at which it occurs. This potentially ...

Researchers use light to coax stem cells to repair teeth

Researchers use light to coax stem cells to repair teeth
2014-05-28
A Harvard-led team is the first to demonstrate the ability to use low-power light to trigger stem cells inside the body to regenerate tissue, an advance they reported in Science Translational Medicine. The research, led by Wyss Institute Core Faculty member David Mooney, Ph.D., lays the foundation for a host of clinical applications in restorative dentistry and regenerative medicine more broadly, such as wound healing, bone regeneration, and more. The team used a low-power laser to trigger human dental stem cells to form dentin, the hard tissue that is similar to bone ...

EARTH magazine: The history, science and poetry of New England's stone walls

2014-05-28
Alexandria, Va. — When author John-Manuel Andriote returned to his hometown in New England after years away, he noticed something that had been invisible to him while growing up there — the old stone walls tumbling off into the forests. The realization that the crumbling and overgrown walls meant those forests had once been cleared farm lands set Andriote on a years-long journey of discovery that highlights the intersections of geologic and human history. The story of New England's stone walls begins with the glaciers of the last ice age, meanders through the Colonial ...

Some high blood pressure drugs may be associated with increased risk of vision-threatening disease

2014-05-28
SAN FRANCISCO – May 28, 2014 – There may be a connection between taking vasodilators and developing early-stage age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the leading cause of vision loss and blindness among Americans who are age 65 and older, according to a study published online in Ophthalmology, the journal of the American Academy of Ophthalmology. AMD – the deterioration of the eye's macula, which is responsible for the ability to see fine details clearly – affects an estimated 11 million people in the United States. In addition to increased age, the cause of AMD ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Geneticist unlocks mysteries of childhood psychiatric disorders through innovative research

New study uncovers key insights into protein interactions in Duchenne muscular dystrophy, paving way for more targeted therapies

Revolutionizing fragrance design using deep neural networks (DNNs) scent profiles from chemical data

Custom-fit bone grafts: the future of craniomaxillofacial surgery

A new ‘molecular lantern’ detects brain metastasis in mice by inserting a probe thinner than a hair into the brain

McGill scientist reveals how early life experiences reshape our genes and brain health

Renowned scientist reveals vital link between inflammation and depression through groundbreaking research

Medical researcher explores economic impact of psychedelic therapy implementation

Improving immunotherapies for kidney cancer

Billing patients for portal messages could decrease message volume and ease physician workload

Study of Sherpas highlights key role of kidneys in acclimatization to high altitudes

Smartphone app can help reduce opioid use and keep patients in treatment, UT Health San Antonio study shows

Improved health care value cannot be achieved by hospital mergers and acquisitions alone

People who are immunocompromised may not produce enough protective antibodies against RSV after vaccination

Does coffee prevent head and neck cancer?

AI replaces humans in identifying causes of fuel cell malfunctions

Pitfalls of FDA-approved germline cancer predisposition tests

A rising trend of 'murderous verbs' in movies over 50 years

Brain structure differences are associated with early use of substances among adolescents

Pain coping skills training for patients receiving hemodialysis

Trends of violence in movies during the past half century

Major depressive disorder and driving behavior among older adults

John Howington, MD, MBA, FCCP, to become the 87th President of the American College of Chest Physicians

Preclinical study finds surges in estrogen promote binge drinking in females

Coming AI economy will sell your decisions before you take them, researchers warn

NASA’s Parker Solar Probe makes history with closest pass to Sun

Are we ready for the ethical challenges of AI and robots?

Nanotechnology: Light enables an "impossibile" molecular fit

Estimated vaccine effectiveness for pediatric patients with severe influenza

Changes to the US preventive services task force screening guidelines and incidence of breast cancer

[Press-News.org] The brain's reaction to male odor shifts at puberty in children with gender dysphoria