Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Revealed: Why brain tumours are more common in men

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Aug, 2014 08:11 AM
    The absence of a protein known to reduce cancer risk can explain why brain tumours occur more often in males and are more harmful than similar tumours in females.
     
    Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis found that retinoblastoma protein (RB) - a protein known to reduce cancer risk - is significantly less active in male brain cells than in female brain cells.
     
    Glioblastomas, the most common malignant brain tumours, are diagnosed twice as often in males who suffer greater cognitive impairments than females and do not survive as long.
     
    "These results suggest we need to look at multiple pathways linked to cancer, checking for sex differences. Sex-based distinctions at the level of the cell may not only influence cancer risk but also the effectiveness of treatments," explained senior study author Joshua Rubin.
     
    Scientists have identified many sex-linked diseases that either occur at different rates in males and females or cause different symptoms based on sex.
     
    However, Rubin and his colleagues knew that sex hormones could not account for the differences in brain tumour risk.
     
    In lab experiments, the team evaluated three genes to see if they were naturally less active in male brain cells.
     
    The scientists found RB was more likely to be inactivated in male brain cells than in female brain cells.
     
    When they disabled the RB protein in female brain cells, the cells were equally susceptible to becoming cancers.
     
    The protein RB is the target of drugs now being evaluated in clinical trials.
     
    "At the very least, we should think about analysing data for males and females separately in clinical trials," Rubin stressed.
     
    The study appeared in The Journal of Clinical Investigation.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Attention Foodies! Food addiction is for real!

    Attention Foodies! Food addiction is for real!
    Do you experience food craving just by looking at images of delectable food items regardless of how recently you had eaten? Check if your are overweight.

    Attention Foodies! Food addiction is for real!

    Each minute, 2,500 Britons are making love!

    Each minute, 2,500 Britons are making love!
    Each minute, 2,500 Britons engage in love amounting to a staggering 900 million encounters of the close kind a year -- yet the activity results in barely 770,000 British births each year, a Cambridge mathematician has claimed.

    Each minute, 2,500 Britons are making love!

    Little exercise boosts attention span of poor school kids

    Little exercise boosts attention span of poor school kids
    Just 12 minutes of exercise can improve attention and reading comprehension in low income adolescents, says a new study, suggesting that schools serving low income populations should work brief bouts of exercise into their daily schedules.

    Little exercise boosts attention span of poor school kids

    'Organic', 'natural' packaged food may be unhealthy

    'Organic', 'natural' packaged food may be unhealthy
    Do you get lured by healthy words such as 'antioxidant-rich', 'whole grain', 'organic' and so on into buying more packaged food? Be cautious, as these may actually lead you to put on extra kilos.

    'Organic', 'natural' packaged food may be unhealthy

    Feeling drowsy during the day? Check your bones

    Feeling drowsy during the day? Check your bones
    If you often feel sleepy during the day, chances are that your bones may also be fragile. Researchers have found that orexin proteins - blamed for spontaneous daytime sleepiness - also play a crucial role in bone formation.

    Feeling drowsy during the day? Check your bones

    Husband not involved in parenting? Blame his office

    Husband not involved in parenting? Blame his office
    With changing times, men try to see themselves as partners and nurturers besides being breadwinners and role models.

    Husband not involved in parenting? Blame his office