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  • 13
    Nov
    2012
    6:08pm, EST

    Oxytocin keeps attached men away from hot women

    By MyHealthNewsDaily Staff
    MyHealthNewsDaily

    The "love hormone" oxytocin may help maintain romantic relationships by prompting men to keep their distance from attractive women, a new study from Germany suggests.

    In the study, men in monogamous relationships who were given an oxytocin nasal spray stayed about four to six inches farther away from an attractive, woman they didn't know, compared with men in monogamous relationships who received a placebo.

    The oxytocin spray had no effect on the distance that single men chose to keep between themselves and the attractive woman.

    The results suggest the hormone promotes fidelity in humans, said study researcher Dr. René Hurle­mann, of the University of Bonn. The findings agree with previous research conducted on prairie voles, which suggested the hormone plays a role in pair-bonding.

    In humans, oxytocin has been found to promote bonding between parents and children, increase trust, and reduce conflict between couples. And earlier this year, a study found that couples with high levels of oxytocin in the early stages of a relationship were more likely to be together six months later than couples with lower levels of the hormone.

    But until now, there has been no evidence that a dose of oxytocin given after a couple gets together contributes to the maintenance of the relationship, the researchers said.

    The study involved 57 heterosexual males, about half of whom were in monogamous relationships. After receiving either a dose of oxytocin or placebo, participants were introduced to a female experimenter who they later described as "attractive."

    During the encounter, the experimenter moved towards or away from the men, and they were asked to indicate when she was at an "ideal distance" away, as well as when she moved to a distance that felt "slightly uncomfortable."

    The effect of oxytocin on the attached men was the same regardless of whether the female experimenter maintained eye contact, or averted her gaze. Oxytocin also had no effect on the men’s attitude toward the female experimenter — whether men received the oxytocin or the placebo, they rated her as being equally attractive.

    In a separate experiment, the researchers found oxytocin had no effect on the distance men kept between themselves and a male experimenter.

    Future studies are needed to determine exactly how oxytocin might act on the brain to affect behavior, the researchers said.

    The study will be published tomorrow (Nov. 14) in The Journal of Neuroscience.

    FollowMyHealthNewsDaily on Twitter@MyHealth_MHND. We're also onFacebook&Google+.

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  • 8
    Mar
    2012
    3:15pm, EST

    Men with heart failure more likely to die than women

    By MyHealthNewsDaily Staff

    Women with heart failure, a condition in which the heart fails to pump enough blood to meet the body's demands, may live longer than their male counterparts, a new study says.

    The results are based on an analysis of 31 studies involving 28,000 men and 14,000 women with long-term (chronic) heart failure who were followed for three years.

    After taking into account patients' age, men had a 31 percent higher risk of dying over the study compared with women, the researchers said.

    However, the absolute difference between men and women's mortality was only slight. Over the three year period, 25.3 percent of the women and 25.7 percent of the men died.

    The study is the largest to look at how gender affects risk of death for people with heart failure.

    A number of factors could explain the survival advantage in women, said study researcher Manuel Martinez-Selles, of the Gregorio Marañón University Hospital in Madrid. "The female heart appears to respond to injury differently from the male heart," Martinez-Selles said.

    For example, women appear to have less detrimental changes in heart function after an injury, and greater protection from irregular heartbeats, Martinez-Selles said.

    The study also found that overall women were prescribed fewer recommended treatments for heart failure than men, including angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) and beta blockers.

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