Focusing on how that it fundamental genetic differences confers sexual differences in predisposition to help you mental disease are a complicated, multilevel mystery one remains to be explained
The fact that increased prevalence of depression correlates with hormonal changes in women, particularly during puberty, prior to menstruation, following pregnancy and at perimenopause, suggests that female hormonal fluctuations may be a trigger for depression. Nevertheless, primate and rodent studies consistently implicate a role for female hormones, such as estrogen, in depression. Perhaps the most naturalistic depression studies to date to address the role of female hormones involved small groups (n = 4–5) of female macaque primates that formed lifelong social hierarchies with dominant and subordinate females. The latter showed a depression-like phenotype 16 that has been associated with a brain-wide decrease in serotonin 1A (5-HT1A) receptor levels and pal volume. 17 , 18 Interestingly, the reduced hippocampal volume was more extensive in postmenopausal monkeys than in ovarian-intact monkeys, suggesting that ovarian function may be protective.