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Pheromones Point to Sexual Orientation
Lesbians respond differently than heterosexual women, researchers find
By Kathleen Doheny HealthDay Reporter
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TUESDAY, May 9 (HealthDay News) -- Lesbians react differently to the powerful sexual chemicals called pheromones than heterosexual women do, a new Swedish study finds.
However, lesbians don't respond to pheromones in exactly the same way as heterosexual men do, said study author Dr. Ivanka Savic, an associate professor of clinical neuroscience at the Stockholm Brain Institute.
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"The data suggest that there is a difference between male and female sexuality," said Savic, who, with her colleagues, examined the brains of 12 lesbian women, using positron emission tomography (PET), to evaluate their brains' responses to potential sex pheromones.
The new work builds on previous research by Savic and her colleagues, in which they found the same brain region -- the anterior hypothalamus -- was activated in homosexual men and heterosexual women when exposed to the progesterone derivative 4,16-androstadien-3-one (AND). AND is found in human sweat, and occurs in concentrations 10 times higher in men than in women. But the anterior hypothalamus region in the brains of heterosexual men was activated in response to the female pheromone estra-1,3,5(10),16-tetraen-3-ol (EST), the researchers also found. EST is an estrogen-like substance, found in the urine of pregnant women.
The hypothalamus regulates metabolic process and links the nervous system to the endocrine system by secreting brain hormones. It also responds to odor stimuli, including pheromones.
When Savic's team looked at the brain activity of the 12 lesbian women, it found the lesbians responded to both compounds in a similar way. And they processed them in a way more like heterosexual men than heterosexual women. But the relationship to the opposite sex was not as strong as the researchers found it to be in a previous study between homosexual men and heterosexual women. This lends support to the idea, the researchers said, that AND and EST are pheromones involved in sexual preferences. And it lends credence to the theory that homosexuality is different in men than in women, the researchers said.
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Last updated 5/9/2006
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SOURCES: Ivanka Savic, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor, clinical neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden; Brian Mustanski, Ph.D., assistant professor, department of psychiatry, University of Illinois at Chicago; Warren Throckmorton, Ph.D., associate professor, psychology, Grove City College, Pa.; May 8-12, 2006, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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