
Brain Imaging Shows How Men And Women Cope
Differently Under Stress
ScienceDaily (Nov. 20, 2007) —
According to a study that appears in the current issue of SCAN (Social
Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience), researchers at the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine discuss how men and women differ in their
neural responses to psychological stress.
"We found that different parts of the brain activate with different
spatial and temporal profiles for men and women when they are faced with
performance-related stress," says J.J. Wang, PhD, Assistant Professor or
Radiology and Neurology, and lead author of the study.
These findings suggest that stress responses may be fundamentally different
in each gender, sometimes characterized as "fight-or-flight" in men
and "tend-and-befriend" in women. Evolutionarily, males may have had
to confront a stressor either by overcoming or fleeing it, while women may have
instead responded by nurturing offspring and affiliating with social groups that
maximize the survival of the species in times of adversity. The
"fight-or-flight" response is associated with the main stress hormone
system that produces cortisol in the human body -- the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis.
Thirty-two healthy subjects -- 16 females and 16 males -- received fMRI
(functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) scans before, during and after they
underwent a challenging arithmetic task (serial subtraction of 13 from a 4 digit
number), under pressure. To increase the level of stress, the researchers
frequently prompted participants for a faster performance and asked them to
restart the task if they responded incorrectly. As a low stress control
condition, participants were asked to count backward without pressure.
The researchers measured heart rate, cortisol levels (a stress hormone),
subjects' perceived stress levels throughout the experiments, and regional
cerebral blood flow (CBF), which provides a marker of regional brain function.
In men, it was found that stress was associated with increased CBF in the right
prefrontal cortex and CBF reduction in the left orbitofrontal cortex. In women,
the limbic system -- a part of the brain primarily involved in emotion -- was
activated when they were under stress.
Both men and women's brain activation lasted beyond the stress task, but the
lasting response in the female brain was stronger. The neural response among the
men was associated with higher levels of cortisol, whereas women did not have as
much association between brain activation to stress and cortisol changes.
"Women have twice the rate of depression and anxiety disorders compared
to men," notes Dr. Wang. "Knowing that women respond to stress by
increasing activity in brain regions involved with emotion, and that these
changes last longer than in men, may help us begin to explain the gender
differences in the incidence of mood disorders."
Additional researchers involved with this study are Marc Korczykowski, Penn;
Hengyi Rao, Penn; Yong Fan, Penn; John Pluta, Penn; Ruben Gur, Penn; Bruce
McEwen, The Rockefeller University; and John Detre, Penn. This study was
conducted at the Center for Functional Neuroimaging at the University of
Pennsylvania.
Adapted from materials provided by University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
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