Department of Psychiatry, and Connors Center for Women's Health and Gender Biology, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02120, USA.
J Neurosci. 2010 Jan 13;30(2):431-8. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3021-09.2010.
Understanding sex differences in stress regulation has important implications for understanding basic physiological differences in the male and female brain and their impact on vulnerability to sex differences in chronic medical disorders associated with stress response circuitry. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we demonstrated that significant sex differences in brain activity in stress response circuitry were dependent on women's menstrual cycle phase. Twelve healthy Caucasian premenopausal women were compared to a group of healthy men from the same population, based on age, ethnicity, education, and right handedness. Subjects were scanned using negative valence/high arousal versus neutral visual stimuli that we demonstrated activated stress response circuitry [amygdala, hypothalamus, hippocampus, brainstem, orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), and anterior cingulate gyrus (ACG)]. Women were scanned twice based on normal variation in menstrual cycle hormones [i.e., early follicular (EF) compared with late follicular-midcycle (LF/MC) menstrual phases]. Using SPM8b, there were few significant differences in blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal changes in men compared to EF women, except ventromedial nucleus (VMN), lateral hypothalamic area (LHA), left amygdala, and ACG. In contrast, men exhibited significantly greater BOLD signal changes compared to LF/MC women on bilateral ACG and OFC, mPFC, LHA, VMN, hippocampus, and periaqueductal gray, with largest effect sizes in mPFC and OFC. Findings suggest that sex differences in stress response circuitry are hormonally regulated via the impact of subcortical brain activity on the cortical control of arousal, and demonstrate that females have been endowed with a natural hormonal capacity to regulate the stress response that differs from males.
理解应激调节中的性别差异对于理解男性和女性大脑中的基本生理差异及其对与应激反应回路相关的慢性医学疾病中性别差异易感性的影响具有重要意义。在这项功能磁共振成像研究中,我们证明了应激反应回路中大脑活动的显著性别差异取决于女性的月经周期阶段。将 12 名健康的白种绝经前女性与同一人群中的一组健康男性进行比较,这些男性在年龄、种族、教育程度和右利手方面与女性相匹配。使用负效价/高唤醒与中性视觉刺激对受试者进行扫描,我们证明这些刺激激活了应激反应回路[杏仁核、下丘脑、海马体、脑干、眶额皮质(OFC)、内侧前额叶皮质(mPFC)和前扣带回 gyrus(ACG)]。根据月经周期激素的正常变化,女性进行了两次扫描[即早期卵泡期(EF)与晚期卵泡中期(LF/MC)月经周期]。使用 SPM8b,与 EF 期女性相比,男性的血氧水平依赖(BOLD)信号变化几乎没有显著差异,除了腹内侧核(VMN)、外侧下丘脑区域(LHA)、左侧杏仁核和 ACG。相比之下,与 LF/MC 期女性相比,男性在双侧 ACG 和 OFC、mPFC、LHA、VMN、海马体和导水管周围灰质中表现出显著更大的 BOLD 信号变化,在 mPFC 和 OFC 中的效应量最大。研究结果表明,应激反应回路中的性别差异是通过皮质下大脑活动对唤醒的皮质控制的影响进行激素调节的,并且表明女性具有调节应激反应的天然激素能力,这与男性不同。