Advertisement
Last chance!
Fill in the Health of the Nation Survey. You could win R5 000! Closing today.
Stressed out in SA
The pressure is on. Are South Africans becoming a pill-popping nation of boozers?
     TERMS     GET A DAILY HEALTH TIP  
  
MAKE HEALTH24 YOUR HOMEPAGE   
H24 NEWS MEDICAL SCHEMES DIET FITNESS NATURAL MAN WOMAN SEX PREGNANCY CHILD TEEN SUN
FOCUS CENTRES MEDS ORAL PET MIND GRAPHICS VIDEOS ANTI-AGEING WIN TOOLS EXPERTS TALK FIND


Endocrine & Metabolic
Men provide a pitstop
Last updated: Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Ladies, if you're feeling tense, relaxation may be as close as the next malodorous male.

Male underarm sweat can reduce stress in women, as well as alter the timing and length of their menstrual cycles, concludes a new study in the June issue of Biology of Reproduction.

Advertisement
The role of pheromones
"Our study results tell us that there are pheromones produced in male underarms that have nothing to do with sex but can affect the physiology and mood of the recipient," says study co-authors George Preti, a member of the Monell Chemical Senses Centre and an adjunct professor at the University of Pennsylvania, USA.

Pheromones are chemical signals emitted by one animal that cause changes in behaviour or physiology in other animals, according to the study. The most well-known pheromones are those that influence sexual behaviour.

Study methodology
Preti and his colleague, Charles Wysocki, also from the Monell Chemical Sense Centre and the University of Pennsylvania, recruited 18 heterosexual women between the ages of 25 and 45 for the current study.

The women had regular menstrual cycles, normal hormone levels, regular sleep patterns, and had to be within 15 percent of their ideal body weight at the start of the study.

They were followed for three full menstrual cycles. During the first and third cycle, the researchers simply recorded the women's hormone levels using urine samples.

Male extract placed on upper lip
Within the first seven days of the second menstrual cycle, the women spent a day at the research centre. They either had a male extract or ethanol applied by a cotton pad to their upper lip area every two hours for a total of 12 hours. Half of the group received ethanol for the first six hours, and male extract for the remaining six hours. The other half was exposed to the substances in the reverse order.

The male extract was collected on cotton pads place under the arms of men who had voluntarily stopped using deodorant or any soap with fragrance for four weeks.

Ethanol was used as a control. In both cases, a similar scent was used to cover up the odour so the women didn't know what the substance was. Remarkably, none of the women figured out they were inhaling perspiration odours. Some believed they were involved in a study of alcohol, perfume, or even lemon floor wax.

Blood samples were taken every 10 minutes while they were at the research centre. The women were also asked to evaluate their moods while they were undergoing testing during the second cycle.

Reproductive hormone produced more readily
The researchers found that surges of luteinising hormone (LH), an important reproductive hormone, were produced in less time after exposure to the male underarm extract. Exposure to the male extract shortened the time between LH surges by 20 percent, according to the study. Changes in LH surges can change the length and timing of the menstrual cycle.

They also found that women exposed to the male extract reported feeling less tense and more relaxed.

"Much to our surprise, we also saw the mood changes," Preti says.

He says he and his colleagues hope to get further funding to isolate the exact chemicals in male perspiration that are responsible for these changes, which in the future might have some clinical applications in treating problems such as infertility.

Effect questioned
"The effect on the LH peak seems to be real. It was pretty consistent," says Dr Manvinder Singh, a reproductive endocrinologist at William Beaumont Hospital in Michigan, USA.

When it came to the mood changes, however, Singh wasn't as convinced.

"There could be an effect on mood, but the effect is slight," he says, adding, "We shouldn't market men's perspiration as a way to get women less tense." – (HealthScout News)

Read more:
No masking mouse lust
Sweat turns woman on
 
Print this article on
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent

 JOBS
Civil Engineering Technician
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Financial Manager
R380,000-400,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - West Rand
Treasury Specialist
R300,000-380,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
JAVA DEVELOPER (YL028 – 04/09)
Gauteng
DELPHI DEVELOPER (YL023 – 04/09)
R320,000-360,000 Per Annum Cost To Company Market Related
Gauteng
Senior and Lead .NET Developers (C#.NET, Arc, Design, Code.)
R300,000-600,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
A C# Developer (C Sharp Developer)
Gauteng - Johannesburg
A C++ Developer (Software Developer)
Gauteng - Pretoria
 Today's top stories
  • BABY BOOMERS USING COCAINE
  • 12 TB PATIENTS NOW MISSING
  • GENERIC MEDS SHORTAGE IN SA
  • WOMEN PICK DAD LOOKALIKES
  • STEROIDS UP INFERTILITY, HEART RISK
  • 2.4 MIL CANCER DEATHS FROM TOBACCO
  • DIETS GET THE THUMBS UP
     
    Subscribe to...
    *Daily tip
    *Weekly tip
    Want to subscribe to our newsletters?
    Click here.
    *Stand a chance to win R1000 every month!

     
     
     
     
    Advertisement



     Sponsored links
     Health24 links

    Advertisement
     Top Condition
     Centres

     

    © Health24 2000-2008. All rights reserved
      
    We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
    information.
    Verify here.