Animation Shows How A Woman's Pelvis Morphs During Her Lifetime

Scientists have long known that the female pelvis widens and shrinks throughout a woman's lifetime -- and now, an animated model details exactly how. The model, created as part of a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday, shows that the pelvis widens as a woman becomes more fertile and narrows as she ages. These changes are most likely mediated by estrogen, and they reveal that the female pelvis is not "written in bone," as Dr. Marcia Ponce de León, senior researcher at the University of Zurich in Switzerland and a co-author of the study, told The Huffington Post on Tuesday. "Rather, its development is sensitive to hormonal change, and probably to environmental change -- because hormones are influenced by the environment." "Pubertal rise in estrogen concentrations mediates the widening of the pelvis and the high estrogen levels during the time of highest fertility maintain the width of the pelvis," Ponce de León said. "The postmenopausal fall of estrogen concentration results in narrowing of the pelvis." The researchers analyzed data from CT scans of 124 women and 151 men, tracking them from birth to old age. They then used that data to create computerized models of how the female and male pelvis each develop differently. While the male pelvis just grows larger with the rest of the body, the researchers found that the female pelvis develops in an entirely different way, widening until a woman is about 25 to...
Source: Science - The Huffington Post - Category: Science Source Type: news