Environmental contaminants, endocrine disruption, and transgender: Can "born that way" in some cases be toxicologically real?

Steven David Holladay
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Gender is viewed by many as strictly binary based on a collection of body traits typical of a female or male phenotype, presence of a genotype that includes at least one copy of a Y chromosome, or ability to produce either egg or sperm cells. A growing non-binary view is that these descriptors, while compelling, may nonetheless fail to accurately capture an individual's true gender. The position of the American Psychological Association (APA) agrees with this view and is that transgender people are a defendable and real part of the human population. The considerable diversity of transgender expression then argues against any unitary or simple explanations, however, prenatal hormone levels, genetic influences, and early and later life experiences have been suggested as playing roles in development of transgender identities. The present review considers existing and emerging toxicologic data that may also support an environmental chemical contribution to some transgender identities, and suggest the possibility of a growing nonbinary brain gender continuum in the human population.

环境污染物、内分泌紊乱和变性:在某些情况下,“那样出生”在毒理学上是真实的吗?
性别被许多人视为严格的二元性,其基础是女性或男性表型的典型身体特征集合、包括至少一个Y染色体拷贝的基因型的存在,或产生卵子或精子细胞的能力。越来越多的非二元观点认为,这些描述符虽然令人信服,但可能无法准确捕捉个人的真实性别。美国心理协会(APA)的立场同意这一观点,并认为跨性别者是人类中可辩护和真实的一部分。跨性别表达的巨大多样性反对任何单一或简单的解释,然而,产前激素水平、遗传影响以及早期和后期的生活经历被认为在跨性别身份的发展中发挥了作用。本综述考虑了现有和新出现的毒理学数据,这些数据也可能支持环境化学对某些变性人身份的贡献,并表明人类群体中非二进制大脑性别连续体不断增长的可能性。
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