Dao Harry, Kazin Rebecca A
Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Gend Med. 2007 Dec;4(4):308-28. doi: 10.1016/s1550-8579(07)80061-1.
There has been increasing interest in studying gender differences in skin to learn more about disease pathogenesis and to discover more effective treatments. Recent advances have been made in our understanding of these differences in skin histology, physiology, and immunology, and they have implications for diseases such as acne, eczema, alopecia, skin cancer, wound healing, and rheumatologic diseases with skin manifestations.
This article reviews advances in our understanding of gender differences in skin.
Using the PubMed database, broad searches for topics, with search terms such as gender differences in skin and sex differences in skin, as well as targeted searches for gender differences in specific dermatologic diseases, such as gender differences in melanoma, were performed. Additional articles were identified from cited references. Articles reporting gender differences in the following areas were reviewed: acne, skin cancer, wound healing, immunology, hair/alopecia, histology and skin physiology, disease-specific gender differences, and psychological responses to disease burden.
A recurring theme encountered in many of the articles reviewed referred to a delicate balance between normal and pathogenic conditions. This theme is highlighted by the complex interplay between estrogens and androgens in men and women, and how changes and adaptations with aging affect the disease process. Sex steroids modulate epidermal and dermal thickness as well as immune system function, and changes in these hormonal levels with aging and/or disease processes alter skin surface pH, quality of wound healing, and propensity to develop autoimmune disease, thereby significantly influencing potential for infection and other disease states. Gender differences in alopecia, acne, and skin cancers also distinguish hormonal interactions as a major target for which more research is needed to translate current findings to clinically significant diagnostic and therapeutic applications.
The published findings on gender differences in skin yielded many advances in our understanding of cancer, immunology, psychology, skin histology, and specific dermatologic diseases. These advances will enable us to learn more about disease pathogenesis, with the goal of offering better treatments. Although gender differences can help us to individually tailor clinical management of disease processes, it is important to remember that a patient's sex should not radically alter diagnostic or therapeutic efforts until clinically significant differences between males and females arise from these findings. Because many of the results reviewed did not originate from randomized controlled clinical trials, it is difficult to generalize the data to the general population. However, the pressing need for additional research in these areas becomes exceedingly clear, and there is already a strong foundation on which to base future investigations.
人们对研究皮肤的性别差异越来越感兴趣,以便更多地了解疾病发病机制并发现更有效的治疗方法。在我们对皮肤组织学、生理学和免疫学方面这些差异的理解上,最近已经取得了进展,并且它们对痤疮、湿疹、脱发、皮肤癌、伤口愈合以及有皮肤表现的风湿性疾病等病症具有影响。
本文综述了我们对皮肤性别差异理解的进展。
利用PubMed数据库,对诸如皮肤性别差异和皮肤性差异等主题进行广泛搜索,以及对特定皮肤病中的性别差异,如黑色素瘤中的性别差异进行针对性搜索。从引用文献中识别出其他文章。对报告以下领域性别差异的文章进行了综述:痤疮、皮肤癌、伤口愈合、免疫学、毛发/脱发、组织学和皮肤生理学、疾病特异性性别差异以及对疾病负担的心理反应。
在所综述的许多文章中遇到的一个反复出现的主题是正常与致病状况之间的微妙平衡。雌激素和雄激素在男性和女性中的复杂相互作用以及衰老过程中的变化和适应如何影响疾病进程突出了这一主题。性类固醇调节表皮和真皮厚度以及免疫系统功能,并且这些激素水平随着衰老和/或疾病进程的变化会改变皮肤表面pH值、伤口愈合质量以及患自身免疫性疾病的倾向,从而显著影响感染和其他疾病状态的可能性。脱发、痤疮和皮肤癌中的性别差异也将激素相互作用作为一个主要靶点区分开来,需要更多研究将当前发现转化为具有临床意义的诊断和治疗应用。
已发表的关于皮肤性别差异的研究结果在我们对癌症、免疫学、心理学、皮肤组织学和特定皮肤病的理解上取得了许多进展。这些进展将使我们能够更多地了解疾病发病机制,目标是提供更好的治疗方法。虽然性别差异可以帮助我们针对疾病进程进行个性化的临床管理,但重要的是要记住,在这些发现产生男性和女性之间具有临床意义的差异之前,患者的性别不应从根本上改变诊断或治疗努力。由于所综述的许多结果并非来自随机对照临床试验,因此很难将数据推广到一般人群。然而,这些领域迫切需要更多研究变得极其明显,并且已经有了一个坚实的基础来进行未来的调查。