Polysist ovaries in women ... risks that can be transferred to male children
A recent study showed that the children of women with PCOS are three times more likely to develop obesity compared to male children of non -insinies with the same syndrome. The results of the study, published in the journal “Cell Ribors”, emphasize an unknown risk of passing health problems associated with PCOS over generations by the male side of the family. The transition through generations is the transfer of functions or characteristics from one generation to another, and this can happen in different ways, including genetics and environmental factors. The effects on generations require at least the transfer of incidence functions to the third generation. PCOS is caused by the secretion of the ovaries of many sexual testosterone. The disease affects about 15 % of women of the childhood age around the world. How can it affect men? The disease is related to various health problems such as diabetes, obesity and mental illness in women. As is known, the girls of women with PCOS syndrome have a risk that the incidence of the disease itself has 5 times the incidence of the disease itself, but the recent study indicates that this syndrome can directly affect men from the offspring of female injuries. Although it is not yet clear how male children are affected by women with PCOS, research indicates that they – the male children – are more likely to have weight and hormones. The researchers used previous data and performed experiments on mice to determine whether the characteristics similar to PCOS were transferred from mothers to their children and how they were done. Data, more than 460,000 children born in Sweden, were included in the study study between July 2006 and December 2015. Among them were nearly 9,000 children of women with PCOS. Thereafter, the researchers identified any of the children who were obese. The high levels of cholesterol and lead author of the study, Elizabett Steiner Victorin, who is a professor of gender -endocrinology and metabolism in the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology at the Swedish Carolinska Institute, said in an interview with “Al Sharq” that her previous research on human illness would be. She adds: “The gender and metabolic properties similar to PCOS, which results from the exposure of mice that carry hormones similar to testosterone, is transmitted from mothers (the zero generation) to girls (the first generation) and the grandchildren of girls (the second generation), and even the girls of the grandsons (third generation).” In the new study, the researchers also showed the transfer of damage from mothers to the third generation of their male children. In studying the longitudinal cases and evidence of the children of women with non -infected women’s syndrome, the researcher says: “We have shown that the children of the PCOS suffer from high levels of total cholesterol and low -density sebaceous cholesterol compared to the children of mothers who do not suffer from diseases.” Victorian notes that this damage increases the risk of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes later in life. The study highlights a risk that has not previously been estimated at reproductive changes, metabolism and the possibility of transfer by generations. Elizabeth Victorine says that the unfavorable environment in the uterus during pregnancy not only affects the growth of the fetus but also affects the bacterial cells of this fetus, which is the cells specialized in the body that produce the dialects and sex cells needed for sexual reproduction, “as the disease can transform these bacterial cells or genetically.” Also read: