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Gender-specific approach in psychiatric diseases: Because sex matters

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 896, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.173895

Keywords

Gender; Sex; Eating disorders; Schizophrenia; Mood disorders; Neurodevelopmental disorders

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There are genetic and hormonal differences between males and females in both animals and humans, leading to sex-related differences in brain activity and responses to stimuli. Gender-specific medicine, previously neglected, has gained scientific and clinical attention in the last three decades. Research has identified gonadal hormones as important determinants of male-female differences, with animal studies playing a key role in understanding these differences.
In both animals and human beings, males and females differ in their genetic background and hormonally driven behaviour and show sex-related differences in brain activity and response to internal and external stimuli. Gender-specific medicine has been a neglected dimension of medicine for long time, and only in the last three decades it is receiving the due scientific and clinical attention. Research has recently begun to identify factors that could provide a neurobiological basis for gender-based differences in health and disease and to point to gonadal hormones as important determinants of male-female differences. Animal studies have been of great help in understanding factors contributing to sex-dependent differences and sex hormones action. Here we review and discuss evidence provided by clinical and animal studies in the last two decades showing gender (in humans) and sex (in animals) differences in selected psychiatric disorders, namely eating disorders (anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder), schizophrenia, mood disorders (anxiety, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder) and neurodevelopmental disorders (autism spectrum disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder).

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