Endocrine modulation of the adolescent brain: a review

  • Universidad Bernardo O'Higgins ROR
  • Medical College of Wisconsin ROR
  • Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile ROR
  • Florida State University ROR

Journal of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology, 24(6), 330-337

DOI 10.1016/j.jpag.2011.01.061 PMID 21514192

Abstract

Neurophysiological and behavioral development is particularly complex in adolescence. Youngsters experience strong emotions and impulsivity, reduced self-control, and preference for actions which offer immediate rewards, among other behavioral patterns. Given the growing interest in endocrine effects on adolescent central nervous system development and their implications on later stages of life, this article reviews the effects of gonadal steroid hormones on the adolescent brain. These effects are classified as organizational, the capacity of steroids to determine nervous system structure during development, and activational, the ability of steroids to modify nervous activity to promote certain behaviors. During transition from puberty to adolescence, steroid hormones trigger various organizational phenomena related to structural brain circuit remodelling, determining adult behavioral response to steroids or sensory stimuli. These changes account for most male-female sexual dimorphism. In this stage sex steroids are involved in the main functional mechanisms responsible for organizational changes, namely myelination, neural pruning, apoptosis, and dendritic spine remodelling, activated only during embryonic development and during the transition from puberty to adolescence. This stage becomes a critical organizational window when the appropriately and timely exerted functions of steroid hormones and their interaction with some neurotransmitters on adolescent brain development are fundamental. Thus, understanding the phenomena linking steroid hormones and adolescent brain organization is crucial in the study of teenage behavior and in later assessment and treatment of anxiety, mood disorders, and depression. Adolescent behavior clearly evidences a stage of brain development influenced for the most part by steroid hormones.

Topics

Vigil gonadal steroid hormones adolescent brain development, organizational activational effects sex steroids brain puberty, estrogen progesterone adolescent brain myelination neural pruning, sexual dimorphism brain development steroid hormones adolescence, steroid hormone effects teenage behavior mood disorders, endocrine modulation puberty brain remodelling review, adolescent brain critical window steroid hormone organization, sex steroids neurotransmitter interaction adolescent brain, gonadal hormones impulsivity self-control adolescent neurodevelopment, progesterone estrogen apoptosis dendritic spine remodelling puberty
PMID 21514192 21514192 DOI 10.1016/j.jpag.2011.01.061 10.1016/j.jpag.2011.01.061

Cite this article

Vigil, P., Orellana, R. F., Cortés, M. E., Molina, C. T., Switzer, B. E., & Klaus, H. (2011). Endocrine modulation of the adolescent brain: a review. *Journal of pediatric and adolescent gynecology*, *24*(6), 330-337. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpag.2011.01.061

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