In an abstract of the study of "Phytoestrogen action in the adult and developing brain" by Patisaul HB., posted in US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health, researchers found that their neurobehavioural actions are largely anti-oestrogenic, either antagonising or producing an action in opposition to that of oestradiol. Small, physiologically relevant exposure levels can alter oestrogen-dependent gene expression in the brain and affect complex behaviour in a wide range of species. The implications for these findings in humans, and particularly in infants, largely remain uninvestigated but are a subject of increasing public interest.
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Monday, September 26, 2011
Soy and Neurobehavioural Actions
Posted by Chantel M. Contributed by US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health
In an abstract of the study of "Phytoestrogen action in the adult and developing brain" by Patisaul HB., posted in US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health, researchers found that their neurobehavioural actions are largely anti-oestrogenic, either antagonising or producing an action in opposition to that of oestradiol. Small, physiologically relevant exposure levels can alter oestrogen-dependent gene expression in the brain and affect complex behaviour in a wide range of species. The implications for these findings in humans, and particularly in infants, largely remain uninvestigated but are a subject of increasing public interest.
In an abstract of the study of "Phytoestrogen action in the adult and developing brain" by Patisaul HB., posted in US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health, researchers found that their neurobehavioural actions are largely anti-oestrogenic, either antagonising or producing an action in opposition to that of oestradiol. Small, physiologically relevant exposure levels can alter oestrogen-dependent gene expression in the brain and affect complex behaviour in a wide range of species. The implications for these findings in humans, and particularly in infants, largely remain uninvestigated but are a subject of increasing public interest.
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