Why men store fat in their bellies, women in their hips

Washington, May 15 (ANI): Researchers claim to have answered the age-old question of why men store fat in their bellies and women store it in their hips – the fat tissue is almost completely different, genetically speaking that is.

“We found that out of about 40,000 mouse genes, only 138 are commonly found in both male and female fat cells,” said Dr. Deborah Clegg, assistant professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center and senior author of the study appearing in the International Journal of Obesity. “This was completely unexpected. We expected the exact opposite – that 138 would be different and the rest would be the same between the sexes.”

The study involved mice, which distribute their fat in a sexually dimorphic pattern similar to humans.

“Given the difference in gene expression profiles, a female fat tissue won”t behave anything like a male fat tissue and vice versa,” Dr. Clegg said. “The notion that fat cells between males and females are alike is inconsistent with our findings.”

In humans, men are more likely to carry extra weight around their guts while pre-menopausal women store it in their butts, thighs and hips.

The bad news for men is that belly, or visceral, fat has been associated with numerous obesity-related diseases including diabetes and heart disease. Women, on the other hand, are generally protected from these obesity-related disorders until menopause, when their ovarian hormone levels drop and fat storage tends to shift from their rear ends to their waists.

“Although our new findings don”t explain why women begin storing fat in their bellies after menopause, the results do bring us a step closer to understanding the mechanisms behind the unwanted shift,” Dr. Clegg said.

For the study, researchers used a microarray analysis to determine whether male fat cells and female fat cells were different between the waist and hips and if they were different based on gender at a genetic level.

Because the fat distribution patterns of male and female mice are similar to those of humans, the researchers used the animals to compare genes from the belly and hip fat pads of male mice, female mice and female mice whose ovaries had been removed – a condition that closely mimics human menopause. Waist and hip fat (subcutaneous fat) generally accumulates outside the muscle wall, whereas belly fat (visceral fat), a major health concern in men and postmenopausal women, develops around the internal organs.

In addition to the genetic differences among fat tissues, the researchers found that male mice that consumed a high-fat diet for 12 weeks gained more weight than female mice on the same diet. The males” fat tissue, particularly their belly fat, became highly inflamed, while the females had lower levels of genes associated with inflammation. The female mice whose ovaries had been removed, however, gained weight on the high-fat diet more like the males and deposited this fat in their bellies, also like the males.

“The fat of the female mice whose ovaries had been removed was inflamed and was starting to look like the unhealthy male fat,” Dr. Clegg said. “However, estrogen replacement therapy in the mice reduced the inflammation and returned their fat distribution to that of mice with their ovaries intact.”

Dr. Clegg said the results suggest that hormones made by the ovaries may be critical in determining where fat is deposited. (ANI)

Prenatal smoking exposure may lead to psychiatric problems

Washington, May 4 (ANI): Prenatal smoking can lead to psychiatric problems in children and increase the need for psychotropic medications in childhood and young adulthood, claims a new study.

In the study, Finnish researchers found that adolescents who had been exposed to prenatal smoking were at increased risk for use of all psychiatric drugs especially those uses to treat depression, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and addiction compared to non-exposed youths.

The study has been presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) annual meeting in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

“Recent studies show that maternal smoking during pregnancy may interfere with brain development of the growing fetus,” said Mikael Ekblad, lead author of the study and a pediatric researcher at Turku University Hospital in Finland. “By avoiding smoking during pregnancy, all the later psychiatric problems caused by smoking exposure could be prevented.”

Ekblad and his colleagues collected information from the Finnish Medical Birth Register on maternal smoking, gestational age, birthweight and 5-minute Apgar scores for all children born in Finland from 1987 through 1989. They also analyzed records on mothers” psychiatric inpatient care from 1969-1989 and children”s use of psychiatric drugs.

Results showed that 12.3 percent of the young adults had used psychiatric drugs, and of these, 19.2 percent had been exposed to prenatal smoking.

The rate of psychotropic medication use was highest in young adults whose mothers smoked more than 10 cigarettes a day while pregnant (16.9 percent), followed by youths whose mothers smoked fewer than 10 cigarettes a day (14.7 percent) and unexposed youths (11.7 percent).

The risk for medication use was similar in males and females, and remained after adjusting for risk factors at birth, such as Apgar scores and birthweight, and the mother”s previous inpatient care for mental disorders.

Smoking exposure increased the risk for use of all psychotropic drugs, especially stimulants used to treat ADHD (unexposed: 0.2 percent; less than 10 cigarettes/day: 0.4 percent; and more than 10 cigarettes/day: 0.6 percent) and drugs for addiction. An increased risk for use of drugs to treat depression also was seen (unexposed: 6 percent; less than 10 cigarettes/day: 8.6 percent; and more than 10 cigarettes/day: 10.3 percent). (ANI)

Lizard moms pick larger mates to have sons, smaller for daughters

Washington, Mar 5 (ANI): Brown anole lizards are pretty clever when it comes to choosing males to father their kids—they mate with large fathers to produce more sons and go for smaller fathers to produce more daughters, revealed two Dartmouth biologists.

The researchers believe that the lizards do this to ensure that the genes from large fathers are passed on to sons, who stand to benefit from inheriting the genes for large size.

“This species has figured out a clever way to pass on genes with gender-specific effects on fitness. Usually, when natural selection pulls genes in different directions for each gender, the species faces an evolutionary dilemma. But these lizards have solved this puzzle, they”ve figured out how to get the right genes into the right gender,” said Bob Cox, the lead author on the paper.

Researchers manipulated opportunities for females to mate with males of different sizes and found that females prefer larger males.

But, when the choice of partners was limited to small males, females minimized the production of sons.

For researchers, the reason behind this tendency is that the genes that make males more fit are often different from the genes that benefit females, which presents a conundrum because males and females share most of their DNA.

The valuable traits for one gender are not always the same for the other.

“In an evolutionary sense, what”s good for the goose is not always good for the gander,” said Cox.

However, in these lizards, mothers can enhance the fitness of their offspring by manipulating their gender depending on the size of the father.

To demonstrate this, the researchers measured the survival rates of sons and daughters over eight months when released to their natural habitat in The Bahamas.

“As we predicted, the survival of the male offspring increased if they had large fathers. But, we found that the survival of the daughters was not influenced by the size of the father. This suggests that the genetic benefits of large size are specific to sons,” said Calsbeek.

However, the researchers don’t know how do females control the gender of their progeny?

“That”s the big question at this point,” said Cox.

The study is published in the latest issue of Science Express, the advance online publication of the journal Science. (ANI)

Too many chocolates, chips, mental problems linked to acne in teens

London, September 16 (ANI): High intake of chocolate and chips along with mental health issues is linked to the development of zits, pimples, bumps and blemishes in young people, says a Norwegian study.

Researcher Jon Anders Halvorsen, University of Oslo, along with co-authors from Lhasa (Tibet) and Boston (US) looked into the possible causes of the common skin condition affecting millions of adolescents.

The team investigated the links between acne, diet and mental health issues in both males and females.

The researchers found a significant connection between acne and low intake of raw and fresh vegetables in girls, leading to probable indication that a low-glycemic index could have a protective role in the development of acne.

Dr. Halvorsen said: “Our study shows a possible link between diet and acne. However, when we introduced symptoms of depression and anxiety in our statistical model, the role of diet became less clear. On the other hand the association between acne and mental health problems was still strong when diet was introduced. This underscores mental health problems as an important aspect of young people’s acne”.

He concluded, “It is too early to give evidence based diet advice to teenagers with acne. Further studies are needed. Luckily, acne is rarely associated with serious morbidity. However, it does cause problems for a high number of young people. I hope that this study will encourage doctors to help adolescents to treat their acne and researchers to find preventive factors. Young people deserve better!”

The study has been published in the open access journal BMC Public Health. (ANI)

World’s smallest parrot filmed in wild for first time

London, September 8 (ANI): The world’s smallest parrot, which is not much bigger than an adult person’s thumb, has been filmed in the wild for the first time.

According to a report by BBC News, an expedition team filming in Papua New Guinea for the BBC programme ‘Lost Land of the Volcano’ caught two of the buff-faced pygmy parrots on camera.

Another adult, which weighs less than half an ounce, was also trapped by the expedition team’s bird expert.

On average, buff-faced pygmy parrots (Micropsitta pusio) stand less than 9cm tall and weigh 11.5g (0.41oz).

They are found across the northern lowlands of the island of New Guinea from the west to the southeastern tip, up to an altitude of around 800m.

Males and females look similar, but females have less prominent markings on the head.

The birds have green feathers with yellowish plumage on their underparts; while their cheeks, face, and crown are more buff-coloured, hence their name.

BBC wildlife cameraman Gordon Buchanan first discovered a tiny nest belonging to two parrots deep within pristine rainforest.

The birds nest in termite mounds, using their beaks and claws to dig their way in before laying eggs in the hole created.

Buchanan staked out the nest from within a camouflaged hide, and was rewarded after a long wait when two birds returned.

He filmed the pair at their nest entrance, as the male and female reinforced their bond by rubbing against one another.

Later, another parrot was trapped unharmed by Dr Jack Dumbacher, an ornithologist from the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, US, who had accompanied the BBC expedition team.

Buff-faced pygmy parrots do not eat fruit and nuts but lichen and fungi.

However, so little is still known about their dietary habits that it has proved difficult to rear the birds in captivity. (ANI)

England’s Ashes winners set for lucrative advert deals

London, Aug.24 (ANI): England’s Ashes-winning cricketers are now hot commercial properties.

According to John Taylor, chairman of Sports Impact, a leading consultancy, “Brands want to be associated with winners and the whole country will see England’s cricketers in that category again now.”

When England won the Ashes in 2005, the stars were Andrew Flintoff and Kevin Pietersen. This time the poster boy will be Stuart Broad, 23, the Nottinghamshire all-rounder named Man of the Match yesterday after taking five Australian wickets.

Broad has all the attributes to become a marketing man’s dream.

“He is intelligent, articulate and good looking, he can appeal to both males and females and is perfect to attract the elusive 18 to 30 male advertising market,” The Times quoted Taylor, as saying.

Broad opted not to take part in the lucrative Indian Premier League tournament, preferring instead to concentrate on the Ashes.

He already has endorsement deals with Waitrose and Maximuscle. A sizeable contract with the IPL will be there for the taking next year, should he choose to accept.

“Stuart is incredibly mature for his age,” Mick Newell, the Nottinghamshire director of cricket, said last night.

“He’ll enjoy the next few days, but he’ll soon be looking forward to playing cricket again. I don’t have any concerns about his ability to cope with the attention,” Newell added.

After a difficult year trying to find sponsors, the England and Wales Cricket Board has been delighted with npower’s decision to extend sponsorship of Test cricket and the search for a Twenty20 and one-day backer will now be far easier. (ANI)

Amphibians like to mate under a full Moon

London, July 14 (ANI): Scientists have discovered that amphibians around the world synchronize their mating activity by the full Moon.

According to a report by BBC News, this global phenomenon has never been noticed before, but frogs, toads and newts all like to mate by moonlight.

The animals use the lunar cycle to co-ordinate their gatherings, ensuring that enough males and females come together at the same time.

In doing so the creatures maximize their spawning success and reduce their odds of being eaten.

Biologist Rachel Grant of the Open University, UK, was studying salamanders near a lake in central Italy for her PhD in 2005 when she noticed toads all over the road, under a full Moon.

“Although this might have been a coincidence, the following month I went along the same route every day at dusk and found that the numbers of toads on the road increased as the Moon waxed, to a peak at full Moon, and then declined again,” she said.

A review of the scientific literature found little mention of any similar records, so Grant returned to the same site in 2006 and 2007 to survey the amphibians in more detail.

She then collated her data with a 10-year analysis of the mating habits of frogs and toads at a pond near Oxford, UK, collected by her supervisor Tim Halliday, and with data on toads and newts living in Wales collected by colleague Elizabeth Chadwick from Cardiff University, UK.

“We analysed the data, and found a lunar effect at all three sites,” Grant said.

For example, the common toad (Bufo bufo) arrives at all its breeding sites, mates and spawns around the full Moon. The common frog (Rana temporaria) also spawns around the time of the full Moon.

“Newts also seem to be affected by the lunar cycle but the results are less clear,” said Grant.

Newt arrivals peak during both the full and new moons.

The researchers have also looked at historical data collected in Java on the Javanese toad and found that it too mates by the lunar cycle, with females ovulating on or near to the full Moon.

“We now have evidence of lunar cycles affecting amphibians in widespread locations. We definitely think that Moon phase has been an overlooked factor in most studies of amphibian reproductive timing,” said Grant.

“We think this may be a worldwide phenomenon. However, differences between species in ecology and reproductive strategy may mean that not all amphibians are affected in the same way. This is something we would like to investigate further,” she added. (ANI)

How soccer kicks differ in males and females

Washington, July 10 (ANI): Using motion analysis technique, researchers have explored how soccer kick dynamics differ in males and females.

Researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery say that the underlying causes of gender-based kicking patterns could help lead to better treatment, or even prevention for present and future soccer stars.

With the use of video motion analysis at the Leon Root Motion Analysis Laboratory at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City, the researchers examined the dynamics of the kicking motion.

“Prior to this kick study, there had been very little motion analysis to show what was going on during the soccer kick. We know that female soccer players face a greater risk of ACL injury and patellofemoral problems and male players are more at risk for sports hernia. We used motion analysis to determine if the two types of players have different alignment and muscle activation that might correlate to the injury patterns,” said Dr. Robert Brophy, lead investigator of the study.

During motion analysis, the kick is looked at in two different ways simultaneously, and the activity of each of the muscles involved is measured based on electrical impulse.

“But you also need to know what the body is doing when you are taking the readings, is it kicking? Standing? And so on,” said Sherry Backus, co-author of the study.

“To record what the body is doing while the muscles are working, we attach bright surface markers to different parts of the body. Around the room there are eight to 10 cameras that are trained on the markers, recording what the body is doing. We merge the images from all of the cameras and create a three dimensional picture of the person going through the kicking motion. From there we can match up, frame by frame, the electrical signals we get from the muscles with what the person is doing,” she added.

The researchers found that male and female players did differ in both the areas-male players had more activation in the hip flexors of their kicking leg and in their hip abductors of the supporting leg compared to women.

“The hip abductor may be protective against ACL injury and it is interesting that its activation was markedly diminished in women,” said Brophy.

Besides, the knee of the supporting leg in female players took a more knock-kneed, or valgus, position, putting more stress on the outside of the knee joint.

The researchers said that the two differences, low activation of the hip abductor and the knee position, could be a factor in the increased ACL injuries seen in female soccer players.

In addition, they also found that female players did not activate their medial quad muscles in their standing leg, one way male players could be protecting their patellofemoral joint from injury.

However, the hip flexor activation in their kicking leg could correlate to the pattern of sports hernia seen in male soccer players.

The researchers claimed that by understanding the body mechanics specific to the sport, it was possible to potentially prevent a large number of injuries from occurring.

The study was presented at this year’s American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine meeting in Keystone, Colo. (ANI)

New species of lungless salamander found in Appalachian foothills of the US

London, July 9 (ANI): A striking new species of lungless salamander has been found living in a small stream in the Appalachian foothills of the US.

According to a report by BBC News, the salamander, scientifically known as ‘Urspelerpes brucei’, is so distinct that it’s been classified within its own genus, a taxonomic grouping that usually includes a host of related species.

The creature breathes through its skin, and unusually for its kind, males and females have different colouration.

Such a distinct amphibian has not been found in the US for half a century.

The researchers who discovered the creature have dubbed it the ‘patch-nosed’ salamander after the yellow patch on the animal’s snout.

The tiny animal averages just 25 to 26mm long.

The researchers found so few of the animals that either it is highly secretive, or more likely it survives in such small, isolated numbers that it is already at risk of extinction.

“This animal is really a spectacular find,” said Biologist Carlos Camp of Piedmont College in Demorest, Georgia, who led the team which described the new species.

“It is the first genus of amphibian, indeed of any four-footed vertebrate, discovered in the US in nearly 50 years,” he added.

The Appalachian Highlands of the southeastern US is a hot spot for lungless salamander diversity, with species occupying a variety of moist or wet environments including living in streams, underground, among the leaf litter of the forest floor, up cliffs and in trees.

“The salamander fauna of the US, particularly of the southern Appalachians, has been intensively studied for well over a century, so the discovery of such a distinct form was completely unsuspected,” said Carlos.

The amphibian also looks strikingly different to other species.

For a start, it has the smallest body size of any salamander in the US.

It is also the only lungless salamander in the US whose males have a different colour and pattern than females, a trait more characteristic of birds.

Males have a pair of distinct dark stripes running down the sides of the body and a yellow back. Females lack stripes and are more muted in colour.

Males also have 15 vertebrae, one less than females. Yet while most species of lungless salamander have male and females of differing sizes, those of Urspelerpes brucei are close to being equal in size.

Uniquely for such a small lungless salamander, Urspelerpes brucei has five toes, whereas most other small species have reduced that number to four. (ANI)

Hormonal treatment to big cats in Jaipur zoo

Jaipur, May 14 (ANI): The veterinarians of a zoo in Jaipur are giving hormonal treatment to big cats to help them breed faster.

The big cats include tiger, lion and panther. The Jaipur zoo authorities initiated this special course of ten days as most of the male as well female animals were turning impotent.

The animals kept in captivity become prone to impotency. There are two lions, five tigers and four panthers in Jaipur zoo.

The hormones are being given in the shape of drugs.

“In hormonal treatment, we are giving a preparation of PGF12 alpha. Hormones are effective when ovaration doesn’t happen in animals. A hard structure of corpus lithium develops on ovary. Ovaration cant’ take place until this structure doesn’t regresses. Hence, we are giving hormones for ovaration,” said CP Singh, veterinary doctor, Jaipur zoo.

Hormonal treatment has been proved to be good for deer.

“Hormonal treatment is very important for breeding. We have a limited number of tigers and lions comprising males and females. Some of them are ready for breeding. Big cat population will increase by hormonal treatment,” said Laxman Gaur, superintendent, Jaipur zoo.

Experts believe that population of big cats like tiger is declining at an alarming rate in India. By Lokendra Singh (ANI)

Older men more likely to die after pneumonia than women

Washington, April 30 (ANI): Old men are more likely do die after being hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) than women, according to a new study, which suggests that the reason may be differing biological response to infection between males and females.

The findings may have important implications for understanding sex differences in life expectancy.

“Our study found that men with CAP were less likely to survive after an infection compared to women and this was not explained by differences in demographics, health behaviour, chronic health conditions or quality of care,” said Sachin Yende, M.D., assistant professor in the Department of Critical Care Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and corresponding author of the study.

The researchers measured blood levels of inflammatory indicators, including tumour necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukins 6 and 10, coagulation indicators including Factor IX, and fibrinolysis indicators including D-dimer concentrations.

They found patterns in these biomarkers that suggest men generate a stronger inflammatory and coagulation response and, perhaps, break up blood clots more quickly than women in response to infection.

“These differences in inflammatory, coagulation and fibrinolysis biomarkers among men may explain the reduced short-term and long-term survival,” said Dr. Yende.

Data were gathered from the multicenter Genetic and Inflammatory Markers of Sepsis (GenIMS) study. Participants were enrolled upon emergency department admission at 28 academic and community hospitals in Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Michigan and Tennessee from 2001 to 2003.

The study included 2,320 subjects, with a mean age of 64.9 years, 1,136 of whom were men. The men were sicker on admission, more likely to be smokers, and had at least one chronic health condition, such as cardiac disease or cancer. Severe sepsis occurred in 588 (31 percent) subjects. Of these, about half had severe sepsis on their first day of hospitalization.

The researchers found that men had a higher risk than women of death at 30 days (7 percent vs. 4.5 percent), 90 days (11.4 percent vs. 8.6 percent) and one year (21 percent vs. 16 percent).

“Even compared to women with an equivalent illness severity, men were more likely to die. Survival differences persist up to one year after the initial hospitalization, when most patients had recovered from the pneumonia and left the hospital,” Dr. Yende said.

The study is published online in the Critical Care Medicine journal. (ANI)

Does love at first sight actually happen?

Washington, Apr 8 (ANI): Does love at first sight actually happen? Well, scientists say that the answer to this ever-existing query lies in geneticists.

In a study on fruit flies, American and Australian researchers have discovered that some males and females are more compatible than others at the genetic level.

In their opinion, this compatibility plays an important role in mate selection, mating outcomes, and future reproductive behaviours.

The researchers say that the experiments conducted by them have shown that before mating, females experience something called “genetic priming”, which makes them more likely to mate with certain males over others.

“Our research helps to shed light on the complex biochemistry involved in mate selection and reproduction,” said Mariana Wolfner, Professor of Developmental Biology at Cornell University and the senior scientist involved in the study.

She added: “These findings may lead to ways to curb unwanted insect populations by activating or deactivating genes that play a role in female mating decisions.”

For the study, scientists mated two different strains of fruit fly females to males either from their own strain or to males from the other strain.

They noted the males with which females of each strain tended to mate, and then examined whether the females showed differences in behaviour soon after mating and in reproduction-related activities, such as how many offspring were produced and how many sperm were stored.

They also analysed females’ RNA to compare the genes expressed in females mated to males of different strains.

It was found that despite observed differences in mating behaviours and reproduction activities in females mated to different strains of males, there were only negligible mating-dependent differences in gene expression between the groups.

Based on their observations, the researchers came to the conclusion that genetic changes involved in mate choice and reproduction existed before mating began.

The study has been published in the latest issue of the journal Genetics. (ANI)

Mental health problems in childhood may predict suicide in boys

Washington, Apr 7 (ANI): Children as young as eight who suffer from mental problems are more likely to contemplate or attempt suicide in later life, finds a new study.

While studying 5,302 Finnish individuals born in 1981, the researchers found that most males who commit suicide or need hospital care for suicide attempts during their teen or early adult years appear to have high levels of psychiatric problems at age 8.

The rates of mortality [death] by suicide have been found to be high among those with medically serious suicide attempts. For effective prevention, knowledge of the key risk factors for suicide is essential.

Dr Andre Sourander, of Turku University Hospital, Turku, Finland collected information about psychiatric conditions, school performance and family demographics.

The team found that between ages 8 and 24, 40 participants died, including 24 males and 16 females. Of those, 13 males and two females died from suicide.

A total of 54 males and females (1 percent) either completed suicide or made a suicide attempt serious enough to result in hospitalization.

Of the 27 males who either seriously attempted or completed suicide, 78 percent screened positive for psychiatric conditions at age 8, compared with 11 percent of 27 females.

In addition, males who would go on to make life-threatening or completed suicide attempts were more likely at age 8 to live in a family that did not consist of two biological parents, have psychological problems or have conduct, hyperactive or emotional problems.

“The main finding of our study is that severe suicidality in adolescence and early adulthood has different childhood trajectories among males and females,” the authors write.

“The present study shows that among males severe suicidality (i.e., completed suicide or serious, life-threatening attempts) shows a pathway of persistence throughout the life cycle, starting in early childhood.

“Four out of five of these males showed a high level of psychiatric symptoms at the age of 8 years,” they added. (ANI)

The study appears in Archives of General Psychiatry. (ANI)

Mental health problems in childhood may predict suicide in boys

Washington, Apr 7 (ANI): Children as young as eight who suffer from mental problems are more likely to contemplate or attempt suicide in later life, finds a new study.

While studying 5,302 Finnish individuals born in 1981, the researchers found that most males who commit suicide or need hospital care for suicide attempts during their teen or early adult years appear to have high levels of psychiatric problems at age 8.

The rates of mortality [death] by suicide have been found to be high among those with medically serious suicide attempts. For effective prevention, knowledge of the key risk factors for suicide is essential.

Dr Andre Sourander, of Turku University Hospital, Turku, Finland collected information about psychiatric conditions, school performance and family demographics.

The team found that between ages 8 and 24, 40 participants died, including 24 males and 16 females. Of those, 13 males and two females died from suicide.

A total of 54 males and females (1 percent) either completed suicide or made a suicide attempt serious enough to result in hospitalization.

Of the 27 males who either seriously attempted or completed suicide, 78 percent screened positive for psychiatric conditions at age 8, compared with 11 percent of 27 females.

In addition, males who would go on to make life-threatening or completed suicide attempts were more likely at age 8 to live in a family that did not consist of two biological parents, have psychological problems or have conduct, hyperactive or emotional problems.

“The main finding of our study is that severe suicidality in adolescence and early adulthood has different childhood trajectories among males and females,” the authors write.

“The present study shows that among males severe suicidality (i.e., completed suicide or serious, life-threatening attempts) shows a pathway of persistence throughout the life cycle, starting in early childhood.

“Four out of five of these males showed a high level of psychiatric symptoms at the age of 8 years,” they added. (ANI)

The study appears in Archives of General Psychiatry. (ANI)

Vegetarians ‘at higher risk of eating disorders’

Washington, Apr 1 (ANI): Vegetarians may have a healthier diet, but they are at an increased risk of having eating disorders, say researchers.

Researchers from at University of Minnesota, University of Texas and St. John’s University have revealed that while vegetarians tend to eat healthier diets and are less likely than non-vegetarians to be overweight or obese, they may be at increased risk for binge eating with loss of control

In addition, former vegetarians may be at increased risk for extreme unhealthful weight-control behaviours.

Examples of extreme unhealthful weight-control behaviours included “took diet pills,” “made myself vomit,” “used laxatives” and “used diuretics.”

While analysing more than 2,500 males and females aged 15-23, the research team found that vegetarian adolescents and young adult were more likely to report binge eating with loss of control compared to non-vegetarians.

“Adolescent and young adult vegetarians may experience the health benefits associated with increased fruit and vegetable intake and young adults attain the added benefit of decreased risk for overweight and obesity,” said researchers.

“However, vegetarians may be at increased risk for disordered eating behaviors, such as binge eating and unhealthful weight-control behaviors.

“Study results indicate that it would be beneficial for clinicians to ask adolescents and young adults about their current and former vegetarian status when assessing risk for disordered eating behaviors.

“Furthermore, when guiding adolescent and young adult vegetarians in proper nutrition and meal planning it may also be important to investigate an individual’s motives for choosing a vegetarian diet,” they added.

The findings appear in Journal of the American Dietetic Association. (ANI)

Indian-origin researcher unveils gene behind autoimmune disease lupus

Washington, Mar 30 (ANI): A gene linked to the autoimmune disease lupus, and its location on the X chromosome can explain why females are 10 times more susceptible to the disease than males, according to a new study.

Researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center identified the gene called IRAK1 as part of an international human genetic study.

Systemic lupus erythematosus, or lupus for short, causes a wide range of symptoms such as rashes, fever or fatigue that make it difficult to diagnose.

Dr. Chandra Mohan, professor of internal medicine and senior author of the study, said that identifying IRAK1 as a disease gene may also have therapeutic implications.

“Our work also shows that blocking IRAK1 action shuts down lupus in an animal model. Though many genes may be involved in lupus, we only have very limited information on them,” he said.

He also said that locating IRAK1 on the X chromosome also represents a breakthrough in explaining why lupus seems to be sex-linked.

He pointed out that researchers have for long focused on hormonal differences between males and females as a cause of the gender difference.

“This first demonstration of an X chromosome gene as a disease susceptibility factor in human lupus raises the possibility that the gender difference in rates may in part be attributed to sex chromosome genes,” he said.

The study involved 759 people who had developed lupus in their childhood, 5,337 patients who had developed it as adults, and 5,317 healthy controls.

Each group comprised four ethnicities: European-Americans, African-Americans, Asian-Americans and Hispanic-Americans.

Although researchers had found an association between lupus and IRAK1 in previous genetic studies, they failed to find a definite link.

For the current study, the researchers studied five variations of the IRAK1 gene in the subjects, and found that three of the five variants were common in people with either childhood-onset or adult-onset lupus.

For further testing of the link, they took mice of a strain that normally were prone to developing lupus, and engineered them to lack the IRAK1 gene.

It was found that when IRAK1 was absent, the animals lacked symptoms associated with lupus, including kidney malfunction, production of autoimmune antibodies and activation of white blood cells.

“The extensive involvement of IRAK1 in the regulation of the immune response renders its association with lupus a prime candidate for careful genetic and functional analysis,” said Mohan.

Future research will investigate the role that X-linked genes, versus hormonal differences, play in the gender susceptibility rates of lupus.

The study appeared online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

Peer victimisation a predictor of sexual behaviour among adolescents

Washington, February 18 (ANI): A new study from Binghamton University suggests that peer victimization in middle and high schools may be an important indicator of an individual’s sexual behaviour later in life.

Published in the journal Personality and Individual Differences, the study report says that peer aggression and victimization during adolescence is a form of competition for reproductive opportunities.

Andrew C. Gallup, a member of the research team, said that female college students who were frequently victimized during middle and high school reported having sex at earlier ages and more sexual partners than their peers, while males reported just the opposite.

The researcher revealed that in a sample of over 100 college students, surveys showed that over 85 percent of all victimization occurred between members of the same sex, and that indirect victimization-such as teasing, demeaning, and isolating-predicted sexual behavior, while physical aggression did not.

He said that the relevance of victimization and sexual behavior may be embedded in our evolutionary past.

“Aggression may resolve intrasexual competition for the same resources, often including members of the opposite sex. Adolescence serves as a premier age in which to study competition for reproductive access. As the life span of our ancestors was greatly diminished, those who began having children at younger ages would have been selected over those who postponed their sexual behaviour,” he said.

Gallup said that competition among peers for a boyfriend or girlfriend might be influenced by such socially aggressive behaviours, and that the study’s results indicated different effects for males and females.Nearly inverse outcomes were observed between the sexes in terms of victimization and sexual behaviours,” he said.

“And according to evolutionary theory, these types of aggressive and socially dominant strategies operate by different means between males and females. For instance, females preferentially seek status when choosing mates, while males place a larger emphasis on physical attractiveness,” he added.

The researchers believe that victimization acts to lower social status in males, and thus females find these males less attractive.

They also propose that limited physical prowess or physical immaturity may be contributing to this effect, by promoting both an increased likelihood of being victimized and reduced sexual opportunity.

On the other hand, females who are highly victimized by other girls may have lower self-esteem and could be more susceptible to male sexual pressure, and thus the heightened sexual activity of female victims could be an artifact of male coercion.

Another possibility is that attractive girls may simply be the target of aggression by other girls out of envy and resentment over male attention. (ANI)

Survey finds gender bias in how students rate high school science teachers

Washington, February 3 (ANI): Studying 18,000 students of biology, chemistry and physics, a group of researchers have observed notable gender bias in student ratings of high school science teachers.

The study conducted by researchers at Clemson University, the University of Virginia and Harvard University showed that, on average, female high school science teachers received lower evaluations than their male counterparts, even though male and female teachers were equally effective at preparing their pupils for college.

Revealed online in Science Education, the findings show that high school students harbour a gender bias about science teachers.

The researchers have revealed that the physics students in the survey, most notably, showed the largest bias toward female physics teachers.

In biology and chemistry, male students tended to underrate their female teachers, but female students did not, they say.

In physics, both male and female students tended to underrate their female teachers, they add.

“The importance of these findings is that they make it clear that students have developed a specific sense of gender-appropriate roles in the sciences by the end of high school,” said Geoffrey Potvin, assistant professor of engineering and science education and the department of mathematical sciences at Clemson.

“Such a sense of what are and what are not appropriate roles for males and females in science likely impacts the choices students make when they consider their college studies. Such a bias could negatively impact female students and contribute to the loss of women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics,” said Clemson researcher Zahra Hazari, also an assistant professor in engineering and science education and the department of mathematical sciences.

Potvin and Hazari joined forces with Robert H. Tai of the University of Virginia and Phillip M. Sadler of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics to conduct the survey at 63 different colleges and universities across the US, while the students were beginning their college science studies.

The pupils were asked reflect on their high school science experiences.

Most of the questions focused on the content coverage in their high school classes, the classroom techniques used by their teachers, the nature and type of laboratory experiences as well as students’ academic and family backgrounds.

The researchers used quantitative statistical techniques to analyse the data.
They observed that while a few differences in teaching style do exist between male and female teachers, they had no correlation with the gender-bias ratings.
They also found evidence that male and female teachers were equally effective at preparing their students for college, for their students performed equally well in college science.

The team also noticed that the rate at which female teachers produced students bound for college-level science study appeared to be identical to the rate of their male counterparts.
The survey data was drawn from a four-year study funded by the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation. (ANI)

Playing hard to get raises women’s chances of finding ‘good’ men

London, Jan 17 (ANI): Here’s a vital tip for ladies who’re looking for “good” men: play hard to get.

According to mathematicians, women increase their chances of getting a “good” man by not having sex on a first date.

The researchers came to the conclusion after developing a mathematical model of the mating game to help explain why courtship is often protracted.

The study, by researchers at UCL (University College London), University of Warwick and LSE (London School of Economics and Political Science), shows that extended courtship enables a male to signal his suitability to a female and enables the female to screen out the male if he is unsuitable as a mate.

The research, published this month in the Journal of Theoretical Biology, uses game theory to analyse how males and females behave strategically towards each other in the mating game.

The mathematical model considers a male and a female in a courtship encounter of unspecified duration, with the game ending when one or other party quits or the female accepts the male as a mate. The model assumes that the male is either a ”good” or a ”bad” type from the female’s point of view, according to his condition or willingness to care for the young after mating.

The female gets a positive payoff from mating if the male is a ”good” male but a negative payoff if he is ”bad”, so it is in her interest to gain information about the male’s type with the aim of avoiding mating with a “bad” male. In contrast, a male gets a positive payoff from mating with any female, though his payoff is higher if he is “good” than if he is “bad”.

The study looks for evolutionarily stable equilibrium behaviours, in which females are doing as well as they can against male behaviour and males are doing as well as they can against female behaviour. It shows that extended courtship can take place, with a good male being willing to court for longer than a bad male and the female delaying mating.

In this way the duration of a male’s courtship effort carries information about his type. By delaying mating, the female is able to make some use of this information to achieve a degree of screening. Because bad males have a greater tendency to quit the courtship game early, as time goes on and the male has not quit it becomes increasingly probable that he is a “good” male.

Professor Robert Seymour, UCL Mathematics, says: “Courtship in a number of animal species occurs over an extended period of time. Human courtship, for example, can involve a sequence of dinners, theatre trips and other outings lasting months or even years.

“One partner – often the male – may pay the greater part of the financial cost, but to both sexes there is a significant cost of time which could be spent on other productive activities. Why don’t people and other animals speed things up to reduce these costs? The answer seems to be that longer courtship is a way for the female to acquire information about the male.

“By delaying mating, the female is able to reduce the chance that she will mate with a bad male. A male’s willingness to court for a long time is a signal that he is likely to be a good male.

“Long courtship is a price paid for increasing the chance that mating, if it occurs, will be a harmonious match which benefits both sexes. This may help to explain the commonly held belief that a woman is best advised not to sleep with a man on a first date.” (ANI)