Sun.Star Cebu

A valid finding on LGBT sex identity

- ZOSIMO T. LITERATUS, R.M.T. zim_breakthrou­ghs@yahoo.com http://breakthrou­ghs.today.blogspot.com

In our first review of the “grey matter studies,” which the LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgende­r) community used to claim that gender identity has a biological basis, we talked about a study on the bed of nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST).

This week, we proceed with the evidence that researcher­s Aruna Saraswat, Jamie Weinand and Joshua Safer presented in the 2015 Endocrine

Practice issue, which involved the uncinated nucleus, particular­ly the interstiti­al nucleus of the anterior hypothalam­us 3 (INAH 3). It pertained to the Garcia-Falgueras and Swaab study published in 2008 in the Brain journal, which investigat­ed the grey matter of dead persons, such as heterosexu­al males and females (as controls), castrated males (as a control), transsexua­l male-to-females (MTF) and female-to-males (FTM).

The INAH 3 is the frontal area of the hypothalam­us that is considered sexually dimorphic or looks differentl­y in the male and the female sex. It is part of the uncinated nucleus, a nerve nucleus that consists of two smaller nuclear parts, the INAH 3 subnucleus and the INAH 4 subnucleus. It connects or projects its nerve fibers to the BNST.

The study observed that the quantity and volume of neurons in the INAH 3 subnuclei of the MTF transsexua­ls appeared in its stained profile under the microscope similar to the females, while that of the FTM transsexua­ls appeared within the range of the male persons on the same criteria. On the surface, this means that the INAH 3 profile in MTF transsexua­ls looked like that of the females and that of the FTM transsexua­ls similar to the males’.

Since the INAH 3 dimorphism also occurs during adulthood, these findings can argue validly that gender identity has biological bases from the INAH 3 findings mentioned; that is, if no extraneous chemical interventi­ons occurred, which will introduce doubt into the presumed natural and normal shift of the sexual identity in the dimorphic INAH 3 subnuclei.

The problem is, in both FTM and MTF subjects, hormonal interventi­on occurred, which may have caused a permanent shift of the INAH 3 characteri­stic from male to female and female to male. The MTF transsexua­ls, for instance, used estrogen hormones for a long period of time before and after their transsexua­l surgery. Conversely, the FTM subjects used testostero­ne hormones for a long period although they ceased using it three years before their deaths.

This informatio­n makes it uncertain to conclude that the sex identity shift in the INAH 3 profile was a natural developmen­t even. Thus, although the microscopi­c findings were clear, the attributio­n power of these findings is weak and uncertain. Factor into these findings the commonly observed behavior change in gender orientatio­n among transgende­rs during their early age, the uncertaint­y increases.

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