- Sex and illness
A sex-specific illness is an
illness that occurs "only" in people of onesex .In a more general sense, sex-related illnesses are illnesses that are more common to one sex, or which manifest differently in each sex. For example, certain
autoimmune disease s may occur predominantly in one sex, for unknown reasons. 90% ofprimary biliary cirrhosis cases are women, whereasprimary sclerosing cholangitis is more common in men.Neither concept should be confused with
sexually transmitted disease s, which are diseases that have a significant probability of transmission through sexual contact.Sex-related illnesses have various causes:
*Sex-linked genetic illnesses
* Parts of thereproductive system that are specific to one sex
* Social causes that relate to thegender role expected of that sex in a particular society.
* Different levels of reporting or diagnosis in each gender.Men
Examples of sex-related illnesses in male humans:
*
Prostate cancer and other diseases of the male reproductive system occur only inmen
* Certain genetic diseases, such as colour blindness, occur more frequently in men. They are caused bysex-linked ,recessive genes carried on the non-homologous portion of theX chromosome .
*Autism is 4 times more prevalent in males than females.Women
Examples of sex-related illnesses in female humans:
* 99% of
breast cancer occurs inwomen
*Ovarian cancer , and other diseases of the female reproductive system occur only in women.endometriosis , another female reproductive disorder occurs almost exclusively in women, but has rarely been found in men undergoing estrogen treatment for prostate cancer.
* More women than men suffer fromSjögren's syndrome ,scleroderma , andosteoporosis
* In Western cultures, more women than men suffer fromeating disorder s such asanorexia nervosa andbulimia
* Women are more likely to suffer from unipolarclinical depression (althoughbipolar disorder appears to affect both sexes equally)
* Psychologists are more likely to diagnose women than men with borderline orhistrionic personality disorder . There is no current agreement on whether this is because of a real underlying difference between the sexes, or simply because of deeply ingrained social attitudes.See also
*
Gender-based medicine
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