Gillings Michael R
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Evol Appl. 2014 Sep;7(8):897-904. doi: 10.1111/eva.12190. Epub 2014 Aug 11.
Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) affects up to 80% of women, often leading to significant personal, social and economic costs. When apparently maladaptive states are widespread, they sometimes confer a hidden advantage, or did so in our evolutionary past. We suggest that PMS had a selective advantage because it increased the chance that infertile pair bonds would dissolve, thus improving the reproductive outcomes of women in such partnerships. We confirm predictions arising from the hypothesis: PMS has high heritability; gene variants associated with PMS can be identified; animosity exhibited during PMS is preferentially directed at current partners; and behaviours exhibited during PMS may increase the chance of finding a new partner. Under this view, the prevalence of PMS might result from genes and behaviours that are adaptive in some societies, but are potentially less appropriate in modern cultures. Understanding this evolutionary mismatch might help depathologize PMS, and suggests solutions, including the choice to use cycle-stopping contraception.
经前综合征(PMS)影响着多达80%的女性,常常导致巨大的个人、社会和经济成本。当明显的适应不良状态广泛存在时,它们有时会带来一种隐藏的优势,或者在我们的进化史上曾有过这种优势。我们认为经前综合征具有选择优势,因为它增加了不育伴侣关系解体的可能性,从而改善了处于此类关系中的女性的生殖结果。我们证实了该假说产生的预测:经前综合征具有高遗传性;与经前综合征相关的基因变异能够被识别;经前综合征期间表现出的敌意优先指向当前伴侣;经前综合征期间表现出的行为可能会增加找到新伴侣的机会。按照这种观点,经前综合征的普遍性可能源于在某些社会中具有适应性但在现代文化中可能不太合适的基因和行为。理解这种进化上的不匹配可能有助于消除经前综合征的病态,并提出解决方案,包括选择使用停止月经周期的避孕方法。