Wednesday 4 February 2009

Two for the Reference Library

The first is the seminal work on Transsexuality, Harry Benjamin's The Transsexual Phenomenon.

Although published in 1966, 43 years ago, much of what it says is true even today. From Chapter 5:
The possible origin of transsexualism is not discussed in the medical literature very often or in very much detail. Most frequently, there is the simple statement that the cause is unknown.
...
The two principal theories are concerned either with possible organic, that is, biological (inborn) causes not necessarily inherited, or - much more often - with purely psychological ones.
Biologically minded authors are likely to consider TVism and TSism as "intersexual" phenomena but those are almost exclusively European scientists.
...
In this country, psychology and psychoanalysis still dominate the field of sexual deviations. Many psychologists, particularly analysts, have little biological background and training. Some seem actually contemptuous of biological facts and persistently overstate psychological data, so much so that a distorted, one-sided picture of the problem under consideration results.
Psychiatrists with biological orientation strongly disagree and even decry the exclusive psychoanalytic interpretations. But their voice is heard too rarely.
*SIGH* It's still true today. Maybe even more so, as the issue has become to some degree politicised, with the Religious Right in the US having far more say than they did in 1966.

There's a clue that IPSR (idiopathic partial sex reversal) and subclinical Intersex conditions amongst TSwomen are under-reported.
A possible endocrine cause of transsexualism has been investigated in a few cases with great thoroughness. Beyond a few suspicious findings, no definite proof has as yet been found. It may or may not have an endocrine significance that among my 152 male transsexuals, nearly 40 per cent were found to have more or less distinct signs of a degree of sexual underdevelopment (hypogonadism), as was mentioned previously. In such a condition, the pituitary as well as the gonads may be at fault with, of course, an inborn reason behind it.

A few years ago the American psychiatrist, Robert J. Stoller, and his collaborators [8] reported the case of an evidently transsexual man who had a typically feminine body build with feminine hair distribution, but with testes and a normal penis and without internal female organs as revealed through laparotomy. Nevertheless, there was "evidence of continuing estrogen influence from a source which has not been determined . . . The microscopic examination of testicular tissue has failed to reveal estrogen producing cells."
Just like yours truly. *SIGH* yet again. The first description of something resembling my own situation was in 1960.
Schwabe and his collaborators,[9] however, reported shortly afterward that in another, probably transsexual male, large amounts of estrogen (more than double the normal) were found in the testes. The hormone-producing Leydig cells were held responsible for this estrogen production.
And we have two separate etiologies, one where the leydig cells were abnormal, and one still idiopathic. That's consistent with the 4 conjectured etiologies we have today.

The evidence for a neurological basis was even stronger back then than I thought too.
Another interesting observation, neither genetic nor endocrine, but nevertheless organic, was made some years ago by three American public health physicians, Drs. E. G. Williams, J. D. Reichard, and M. Pescor.[12] It concerned the reaction of the nervous system to Prostigmin, a rather powerful drug that acts directly on the nerves.

Normal males and females react alike. So do homosexual males. The drug, however, had no affect at all on the nerves of "feminine men." According to the authors, this may indicate a possible inborn physical trait having to do with an enzyme that takes part in the chemical reaction through which nerves stimulate muscular action.

To the best of my knowledge, these experiments have not been repeated as yet and therefore no confirmation or elaboration of the observation is available. In the light of the following paragraphs, however, they seem to gain particular significance.

Related to the genetic as well as the endocrine possibilities of etiology is a most recent one, coming from Williarn C. Young [13] and his group at the Oregon Regional Primate Research Center. It may be termed the neural or cerebroneural one. The neural structures and brain centers are the "target," that is to say, receiving organs for hormonal influences. Their genetic quality can decide how these hormones may affect them.

The Oregon group, working largely with monkeys, point to the "mechanism of hormonal action in organizing the tissues of the central nervous system." They say, "Evidence has accumulated indicating that the gonadal hormones have a broad role in the determination of (sex) behavior" through their "differentiation or organization of neural tissues."
Sometimes I think we're going backwards, not forwards. None of this has been followed up, the funding for research on the subject dried up completely in the USA, and in Canada, "Jurassic Clarke" continues to adduce ever more complex psychological hypotheses based on ever more tenuous "evidence", completely ignoring the work in this area. The split between the Biologists and the Psychologists is greater now than ever before.
The possibility of other organic causes may be thought of, such as early encephalitic infections or brain injuries at birth, but no evidence along such lines has as yet been found.

However, a report recently came from Dr. Roger A. Gorsky of the Brain Research Institute of the University of California at Los Angeles that may prove to be of greatest importance. Dr. Gorsky, as reported in Science Newsletter [15] found that at least a portion of the brain, known as the hypothalamus, is inherently feminine.

"Unless there is testicular tissue secreting testosterone during this period of development to organize this portion of the brain along masculine lines, it remains forever feminine."

Since the hypothalamus has much to do with the regulation of the pituitary function, secondary endocrine anomalies could well occur.

[8] Stoller, R. J., Garfinkel, H., and Rosen, A. C., "Passing and the Maintenance of Sexual Identification in an Intersexed Patient." A.M.A. Archives General Psychiatry, Vol. 2, April 1960, pp. 379-384.

[9] Schwabe, A. D., et al., Pubertal Feminization in a Genetic Male with Testicular Atrophy and Normal Urinary Gonadotropin," J. Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, Vol. 22, August 1962, pp. 839-845.

[12] "Homosexuality: A Biological Anomaly," J. Nervous & Mental Diseases, Vol. 99, No. 65, January 1944.

[13] Young, William C., Goy, Robert W., Phoenix, Charles H., "Hormones and Sexual Behavior," Science, Vol. 143, No. 3603, January 17, 1964.

[15] Science Newsletter, August 28, 1965.
And here was I thinking that the first evidence came in in 1996, from the autopsies performed by Gooren et al. In fact, it was over 30 years earlier. *SIGH*

Now let's move on to the very recent draft proposal put out by the Endocrine Society, Endocrine Treatment of Transsexual Persons: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline.
In summary, neither biological studies nor psychological studies provide a satisfactory explanation for the intriguing phenomenon of gender identity disorders. In both disciplines, studies have been able to correlate certain findings to gender identity disorders, but the findings are not robust and cannot be generalized to the whole population.
In other words, "more data needed". I think they're being rather conservative regarding the biological evidence, and giving the psychological evidence rather more credence than it deserves. There is one interesting fact though if we're to consider a psychological cause:
One study investigating the need for psychotherapy for sex reassignment applicants, based on questionnaire scores, suggests that ‘classical’ forms of psychotherapy prior to medical interventions are not needed in about two thirds of the applicants (Seikowski 2007).

Seikowski K 2007 Psychotherapy and transsexualism. Andrologia 39:248-252
So 2/3 of people with this "mental illness" don't show any signs of being "mentally ill" from the results of objective tests. No more need be said.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

No surprise to me I remember reading this stuff years ago.

It shouldn't be any wonder now why many of us put stock in the HBS paradigm.

There is more if you dig for it. I know you will find it.
:)

Sue

Anonymous said...

What about those TS people who were able to grow full beards and full body hair? Are they somehow not as TS?

Anonymous said...

What about those TS people who were able to grow full beards and full body hair? Are they somehow not as TS?
What about those cancer patients that didn't have teeth and hair pulled out of their midsection? Are they somehow lesser cancer-patients?

Remember SDA, that the very nature of the beast we are dealing with here is that there are a bunch of sexually dimorphic subsystems and possible ways of determining sex in the body (chromosomes, SRY complex, somatic, endocrine etc.). In most people, they all point in the same direction or are neutral. In some people they do not. The number of possible disagreements of several continuously variable factors is mind-boggling to try to calculate. The only thing that really matters is if the disagreement causes enough distress for someone to seek treatment. At this point they are TS, there is really no "more or less TS".

Certainly being Greek (or another ethnic group known for hirsutism) doesn't make one less TS than an Asian (matched for all other factors).

H2O

Anonymous said...

So like someone could have a natural strong male build and still have the sense of being a woman inside?

Zoe Brain said...

Absolutely yes, they could. It would be relatively uncommon, but yes. Perhaps 1 in 3.

Such cases are particularly troubling. It used to be that in order to be considered for treatment, the body had to be gracile. Those who were not were left to die, and in general, did.

As it turns out, my facial features are not particularly masculine. Neither are my hips. But my arm and chest skeletal structure is definitely robust. Had I presented for treatment in the 70's, it would have been refused point-blank. Not because of how I thought, but because of how I looked.

I know some women far more classically feminine than myself (I've always been a bit of a tomboy in many ways), yet their build is far more classically masculine. Most have 46xy chromosomes, some have 46xx, and a few have 47xxy.

Anonymous said...

PCOS women often have body hair and can grow beards and stocky builds.....and they are no less women for it.

Yes Zoe, the evidence for physical causality goes back to Benjamin and beyond which is why many of us felt the naming of HBIGDA being dedicated to calling us all mental cases was ironic as hell since Old Harry himself stated psychotherapy for transsexuality was an utter waste of time.

On the other hand, one of the top minds in psychiatry today (and born intersexed) will tell you that from all appearances 99% of transgenders (as opposed to transsexuals) are mentally disordered. The wrong people have been forced into therapy as I've said for twelve years now.