Tntil just recently, medical
Z,F,<I lresearcners assumed mat
t' I I men and women were
(~' Ii J physiologically identical,
r@ ~ save for their reproductive
organs. But scientists have now uncovered vital
differences in the ways in which men's and
women's bodies function, experience illness
and respond to treatments.
Much remains to be explored in the emerg-
ing field of gender-specific medicine. However
new findings already show that common con-
ditions can be treated much more'~.ffectively
when Render is taken into consideration
PAIN IN WOMEN
Men and women have different physiologi-
cal responses to intense pain.
For example, a man's blood pressure rises
during intense pain. A woman's blood pressure
remains stable or declines, but her heart rate
accelerates. This difference has Important impli-
cations after surgery, when anesthesiologists
typically monitor blood pressure to assess a
patient's need for painkilling analgesics.
Self-defense: A female surgical patient
should request that heart rate be monitored
along with blood pressure. If her heart rate in-
creases, more pain medication needs to be
administered.
SKIN CANCER IN MEN
More than one million adult Americans are
diagnosed with skin cancer each year. Among
these cases, white men age 45 or older are
twice as prone as women to the most com-
mon skin cancers (basal and squamous cell
carcinoma). Men are also more vulnerable to
deadly melanoma, accounting for nearly two-
thirds of the 7,000 deaths caused by this type
of cancer each year.
Marianne J. Legato, MD, founder of the Partnership for
Gender-Specific Medicine at Columbia University and a
professor of clinical medicine at Columbia's College ot
Physicians and Surgeons, both in New York City. She is
author of Eve's Rib.. The New Science of Gender-Specific
Medicine and How It Can Save Your Life (Harmony).
發表於2024-11-24
Bottom Line Year Book 2004 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
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