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When it comes to developing drugs for mental illnesses, three confounding challenges exist:
Men and women experience them differently, with things like depression and anxiety far more common in females.
A drug that works for one person may not work for another, and side effects abound.
New CU Boulder research, published in the journal
eLIfe, sheds light on one reason those individual differences may exist. Turns out a key protein in the brain called AKT may function differently in males than females.
The study also offers a closer look at where, precisely, in the brain things may go wrong with it, marking an important step toward more targeted and less harmful therapies.
Study offers clues on why psychiatric drugs work differently for women ANI | Updated: Feb 01, 2021 22:07 IST
Colorado [USA], February 1 (ANI): New research, sheds light on one reason why drugs for mental-illness >mental illness work differently on men and men >women, and why these individual differences may exist. Turns out a key protein in the brain called AKT may function differently in males than females.
The results of the research by University of Colorado Boulder were published in the journal eLIfe.
When it comes to developing drugs for mental-illness >mental illnesses, three confounding challenges exist:
Men and men >women experience them differently, with things like depression and anxiety far more common in females.