Newbold R R
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709.
Environ Health Perspect. 1993 Aug;101(3):208-13. doi: 10.1289/ehp.93101208.
Accumulating evidence in experimental animals over the past three decades suggests that mammalian brain development and differentiation of the central nervous system are influenced by perinatal exposure to sex hormones. Hence, changes in human behavioral patterns may be associated with prenatal exposure to estrogenic substances such as diethylstilbestrol (DES). This paper reviews relevant studies from a series of laboratories and finds that no clear-cut differences can be demonstrated to date between unexposed and DES-exposed women in gender-related behavior, although the physical and psychological impact of the problems associated with exposure to DES are well documented. If both prenatal and postnatal influences such as social, economic, and environmental factors are taken into consideration, individual variation is more apparent than differences in gender-related behavior between unexposed and DES-exposed women. In summary, gender-related behavior is determined by a complex array of interacting factors, and prenatal influences are only one of many developmental events. More studies are needed using larger populations with carefully controlled selection criteria to suggest a direct role of prenatal DES exposure on subsequent gender-related behavior.
过去三十年里,实验动物方面越来越多的证据表明,围产期接触性激素会影响哺乳动物的大脑发育和中枢神经系统的分化。因此,人类行为模式的变化可能与产前接触己烯雌酚(DES)等雌激素物质有关。本文回顾了一系列实验室的相关研究,发现尽管接触DES相关问题对身体和心理的影响已有充分记录,但迄今为止,在与性别相关的行为方面,未接触DES的女性和接触DES的女性之间尚未显示出明显差异。如果将社会、经济和环境因素等产前和产后影响都考虑在内,个体差异比未接触DES的女性和接触DES的女性在与性别相关行为上的差异更为明显。总之,与性别相关的行为由一系列复杂的相互作用因素决定,产前影响只是众多发育事件之一。需要开展更多研究,使用具有严格控制选择标准的更大规模人群,以表明产前接触DES对后续与性别相关行为的直接作用。