Entrez PubMed Overview Help |
FAQ Tutorial New/Noteworthy
PubMed Services Journal
Browser MeSH
Browser Single
Citation Matcher Batch Citation
Matcher Clinical
Queries LinkOut Cubby
Related Resources Order Documents NLM
Gateway Consumer
Health Clinical Alerts ClinicalTrials.gov PubMed
Central
Privacy
Policy
|
|
-
The effects of prenatal
stress, and of prenatal alcohol and nicotine exposure, on human sexual
orientation.
Ellis L, Cole-Harding
S.
Minot State University, 58707, Minot, ND, USA.
ellis@minotstateu.edu
BACKGROUND: Studies of rats have shown that
mothers who are subjected to stress during pregnancy are more likely
than mothers who are not stressed during pregnancy to have male
offspring who exhibit female-typical sexual receptivity postures
(lordosis) in the presence of other males following the onset of
puberty. More recent animal experiments have indicated that prenatal
exposure to alcohol affects the sexual preferences of male offspring in
ways that are similar to the effects of prenatal stress. Research with
human subjects have thus far yielded inconsistent findings regarding the
effects of prenatal stress on male sexual orientation, and no research
has yet addressed the possible involvement of prenatal exposure to
alcohol or other widely used recreational drugs, such as nicotine.
PURPOSE: The present study was undertaken to determine if prenatal
stress could be one of the causes of variations in sexual orientation in
humans, both singularly and in conjunction with prenatal exposure to
alcohol and nicotine. METHODS: Over 7500 offspring and their mothers
provided information regarding the offspring's sexual orientation and
the mother's stressful experiences and use of alcohol and nicotine
during pregnancy. RESULTS: Findings indicate that prenatal stress has a
modest but significant effect on the sexual orientation of male
offspring, particularly when the stress occurred during the first
trimester of pregnancy. Regarding prenatal exposure to alcohol, no
evidence was found to suggest that it impacted offspring sexual
orientation of either males or females. Prenatal nicotine exposure,
however, appears to significantly increase the probability of lesbianism
among female offspring, especially if the exposure occurred in the first
trimester along with prenatal stress in the second trimester.
CONCLUSION: The present study is consistent with animal models
suggesting that prenatal stress disrupts the typical sex hormonal milieu
within which male fetal brains are sexed, thereby
feminizing/demasculinizing the male's sexual orientation. However,
little support was found for similar effects of prenatal alcohol
exposure. In the case of prenatal nicotine, this study is the first to
suggest that this drug has masculinizing/defeminizing effects on the
sexual orientation of female offspring.
PMID: 11564471 [PubMed -
indexed for MEDLINE]
|