Monday, June 21, 2010

The Woman was more Sensitive to Stress

According to the previous research, the woman was more potential experienced depression and stress compared with the man. A new study said that was connected with the biological problem. The study of Rita Valentino, the nerves scientist in the Philadelphia Children's Hospital, the USA, found the female mouse more sensitive and not all that could adapt against rose and the fall of the level of the stress hormone had a name corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF).

The Valentino study focussed on CRF, the hormone that was produced in the brain as the response to stress, both to humankind and the mouse. Valentino and the team analysed mouse brains when they reacted to the stress test. They found to female mice neurons had the receptor for CRF that was tied tighter to the hormone so as more was responsive to CRF. 

Moreover, after stress, male mice had the response adaptif that was acknowledged as internalisation to their brain cells. Their cells reduced the number of CRF receptors and to not all that was responsive to this hormone. To the female mouse, the adaptation did not happen. 

Because the mouse nervous system had several similarities with humankind, the research could have implications against humankind although stress to humankind was more complex. (Livescience/EP/X-5) 

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