2019
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00074.2019
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Sexual dimorphism in vestibular function and dysfunction

Abstract: It has been recognized for some time that females appear to be overrepresented in the incidence of many vestibular disorders, and recent epidemiological studies further support this idea. While it is possible that this is due to a reporting bias, another possibility is that there are actual differences in the incidence of vestibular dysfunction between males and females. If this is true, it could be due to a sexual dimorphism in vestibular function and therefore dysfunction, possibly related to the hormonal di… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Although the exact causes of Meniere’s disease are not clear, endolymphatic hydrops are likely causative of this disease [ 53 ]. Several reports had revealed a slight female preponderance in Meniere’s disease [ 54 , 55 ]. Those who had a lower estrogen level presented poor auditory function in postmenopausal patients with Meniere’s disease [ 56 ].…”
Section: Clinical Aspects Of Sex Differences In Acquired Sensorineural Hearing Lossmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the exact causes of Meniere’s disease are not clear, endolymphatic hydrops are likely causative of this disease [ 53 ]. Several reports had revealed a slight female preponderance in Meniere’s disease [ 54 , 55 ]. Those who had a lower estrogen level presented poor auditory function in postmenopausal patients with Meniere’s disease [ 56 ].…”
Section: Clinical Aspects Of Sex Differences In Acquired Sensorineural Hearing Lossmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tinnitus can be associated with a range of physical and mental conditions (Baguley et al, 2013), some of which appear relevant for bothersome tinnitus (Basso et al, submitted). Many of these conditions, like cardiovascular diseases (Regitz-Zagrosek and Kararigas, 2017), chronic musculoskeletal pain (Wijnhoven et al, 2006), thyroid diseases (Vanderpump et al, 1995), Ménière's disease (Smith et al, 2019), depression (Salk et al, 2017), and anxiety disorders (Bandelow and Michaelis, 2015) are marked by gender differences.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the aromatase in the cerebellum and brainstem in rodents has very similar expression to that detected in humans, one can also hypothesize similar vestibulo-cerebellar mechanisms controlled by nE2 and leading to motor learning in these two species [66,79,80,83]. A cardinal consequence that extends this concept is that nE2 could influence human perceptive and motor phenomena that require adaptive process and plasticity in the vestibulo-cerebellar networks in physiological as well as pathological conditions [172][173][174][175][176]. Thus, nE2 may exert its influence not only on VOR adaptation but even on the rebalancing after labyrinthine lesion of vestibular reflexes and perception [177][178][179] and on other motor behaviors like balance and locomotion requiring the computational power of cerebellar networks to adapt responses to the context [120,128,180,181].…”
Section: Implications For the Impact Of Ne2 On The Cerebellar Functionmentioning
confidence: 84%