Maybe it is a good thing we do not remember our births. Difficult ones
can be traumatic and a major cause of the brain damage. But researchers
now suggest that a maternal hormone may protect our brains during birth,
providing a natural safeguard against a problematic delivery.



A recent study of pregnant rats, led by Yehezkel Ben-Ari
<http://inmednet.com/Ben-Ari_bio-CV.html>   of the Mediterranean
Institute of Neurobiology <http://inmednet.com>   in Marseille, France,
examined the effects of the hormone oxytocin. Oxytocin plays well-known
roles in bonding between mates, thereby increasing trust among
people-and a surge of the hormone can trigger the onset of labor.
Ben-Ari's team found that during this same surge, oxytocin latches
onto receptors in a fetus's brain. There the hormone acts somewhat
like tranquilizer and lowers the firing rate of key class of neurons.
"I have never seen such a strong inhibition," Ben-Ari says. The
effect reaches its peak right before delivery, then wears off in a day.

The tranquilized brain tissue from rat fetuses receiving this hormonal
boost resisted damage caused by oxygen deprivation 25 percent longer
than tissue from fetuses in which the hormones were blocked. Ben-Ari
argues that oxytocin probably works the same way to protect human
newborns. Because the mechanisms behind this brain shutdown are common
to all mammals.

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.wordpress.com>
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>

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