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11 - Sex hormones and how they act in the brain: a primer on the molecular mechanisms of action of sex steroid hormones

from Part III - Hormones and the brain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2009

Philip A. Schwartzkroin
Affiliation:
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California at Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA
Martha J. Morrell
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York
Kerry L. Flynn
Affiliation:
Columbia-Presbyterian Cancer Center, New York
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Summary

Women with epilepsy have known for some time that female hormones affect seizures. Scientists have only recently begun to understand why this is so. Hormones impact brain function in many ways. Female sex hormones change the excitability of brain neurons by increasing excitation or inhibition. These hormones act on the cell membrane, changing the threshold for firing, change the rate at which neurons manufacture excitatory and inhibitory brain chemicals, and even change the shape of neurons, altering the way brain cells connect to one another.

Dr Philip Schwartzkroin addresses this fascinating and complex topic. Dr Schwartzkroin is a PhD in Neuroscience and is a Professor of Neuroscience at the University of California Davis, where he heads a laboratory that studies how epilepsy develops in the brain. Further research into the science of hormone effects on brain neurons will lead to better understanding of epilepsy and, most certainly, to new treatments.

MJM

Scientists have long known that steroid sex hormones – those hormones that are made in the ovaries in women and in the testes in men – are critical elements in reproductive and other sexual behaviors. We are only beginning to understand, however, that these same hormones can exert influences on regions of the brain that have little to do – at least directly – with sexual/ reproductive activity. These effects on the brain have been best studied for the female hormones – progesterone and estrogen – partly as a result of the fact that in some women with epilepsy, seizure occurrence appears to be related to parts of the menstrual cycle when estrogen levels are highest and progesterone levels are lowest.

Type
Chapter
Information
Women with Epilepsy
A Handbook of Health and Treatment Issues
, pp. 112 - 118
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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References

Majewska, MD.Neurosteroids: endogenous bimodal modulators of the GABA-A receptor. Mechanism of action and physiological significance. Progr Neurobiol 1992; 38:379–95Google Scholar
McEwen, BS, Coirini, H, Westlind-Danielsson, A. Steroid hormones as mediators of neural plasticity. J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1991; 39:223–32Google Scholar
Morrell, MJHormones and epilepsy through the lifetime. Epilepsia 1992; 33 (Suppl. 4):S49–S61Google Scholar
Terasawa, E, Timiras, PS.Electrical activity during the estrous cycle of the rat: cyclic changes in limbic structures. Endocrinology 1968; 83:207–16Google Scholar

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