Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Estrogen, not testosterone, plays key role in revving women's sex drives

A flood of estrogen during the most fertile period of a woman's cycle helps boost libido, while an increase in progesterone coincides with a drop in sexual deire, according to the self-reported sex drives of women in a UC Santa Barbara study.
Estrogen in women can boost libido during peak fertile days, while progesterone dulls sexual desire, a new study suggests.

A new study on female hormones and sexual desire finds that estrogen, not testosterone, can boost libido in a woman's natural cycle, while progesterone deadens it, they say. Not coincidentally, this increase in desire works in favor of a woman's fertility.

"We found two hormonal signals that had opposite effects on sexual motivation," said lead author James Roney of the University of California Santa Barbara. "Estrogen was having a positive effect, but with a two-day lag. Progesterone was having a persistent negative effect, both for current day, day before, and two days earlier."

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Roney and his team recruited undergraduate students and measured their hormonal levels against self reports of sexual desire. The researchers saw a "measurable increase" in progesterone levels at the same time the subjects reported drops in libido.

The team also discovered a lack of impact of testosterone on women's sexual motivation, which counters a common belief. "Doctors tend to believe that, though the evidence isn't that strong in humans," Roney said. "In the natural cycles, we weren't finding effects of testosterone."

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However, testosterone does have a positive effect on sexual desire during hormone replacement therapy, but Roney said that may be a pharmacological effect.

"Testosterone has those effects if you inject it externally in women who are menopausal, and there are a lot of reasons that might be the case," he said. "For example, testosterone can be converted to estrogen through a particular enzyme. If you inject menopausal women with testosterone, it might be acting as a device that's delivering estrogen to the target cells. So the fact that it works doesn't necessarily mean it's an important signal in the natural cycle."

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Exercise may Help Beat Liver Cancer

According to a recent study, regular exercise may reduce the risk of liver cancer.

The research involved two groups of mice that were fed a control diet and a high fat diet, which were then divided into separate exercise and sedentary groups.

Men Vs. Women

A study completed at the University of Arkansas surveyed over 400 students about exercise, health, body image and sexual performance. Among men, those who worked out every day felt they were highly attractive and were very satisfied with their sexual performance. Women, on the other hand, were not nearly as kind to themselves - only 63 percent of those who worked out everyday rated themselves above average in attractiveness and sexual performance.