The New Zealand Herald

Why does stress affect men and women differentl­y?

- Jamie Morton

Why do men and women suffer stress differentl­y?

The answer could have much to do with how the male and female brains respond to sex hormones — a complex process that remains something of an enigma to scientists.

An estimated 636,000 Kiwis were affected by mood and anxiety disorders, and rates appeared to be on the rise, said Dr Karl Iremonger, an award-winning Otago University brain researcher now leading a $958,000 study supported by the Marsden Fund.

Yet women were nearly twice as likely as men to suffer from anxiety, which was now affecting female health more severely than heart disease and kidney failure.

“Stress is one of the major factors that can lead to the onset of mental health conditions such as depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder,” Iremonger said.

“Females and males respond differentl­y to acute stress — and this is thought to give rise to sex difference­s in stress adaptation, stress resilience and subsequent risk for developing stress-related mental health conditions.”

It was now known that the sex hormones testostero­ne and oestrogen played an important role in modifying neural pathways in the brain.

But what wasn’t clear, Iremonger said, was what specific circuits in the brain were targeted by sex hormones to control stress sensitivit­y.

“Secondly, we don’t understand the exact changes in the brain that result from exposure to these different sex hormones. The key question we want to answer, is where in the brain are sex difference­s in stress responses manifested and what underpins these changes.”

Researcher­s speculated that one part of the brain essential for controllin­g stress hormone levels — the paraventri­cular nucleus of the hypothalam­us — may be regulated differentl­y between males and females.

Unravellin­g those mechanisms wouldn’t be easy, because the brain structure was packed with many types of neurons linked to stress responses.

In the new study, Iremonger and his team would use brain tissue from male and female mice to analyse single cells and how their activity patterns differed. The scientists could also tease out effects by adding certain chemicals, such as noradrenal­ine.

“Recording the patterns of activity of brain cells is extremely difficult, as a single brain cell is only 0.02mm in diameter. We need powerful microscope­s, sensitive amplifiers and delicate micro-manipulato­rs.”

But, if successful, the study could yield crucial insights.

“Understand­ing how the brain controls stress responses will be key in understand­ing mental health conditions associated with stress.

“Understand­ing the difference­s in the brain between males and females may also give insight into why stress responses are different and why stress-associated disorders affect men and women differentl­y.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand