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Hormones converge for couples in love
New Scientist 05 May 04
Men are from Mars and women from Venus - except when they are in love. During
this intense period, men and women become more like each other than at any
other time.
We already know that falling in love is a bit like going crazy. Donatella
Marazziti of the University of Pisa in Italy showed in 1999 that levels of
the neurotransmitter serotonin, which has a calming effect, dip below normal
in those who say they are in love as well as in people with obsessive compulsive
disorder. Both groups spend inordinate amounts of time obsessing about something
or someone (New Scientist print edition, 31 July 1999).
Now Marazziti has looked at the hormonal changes that occur in people who
are in love. Her team measured the blood levels of several key hormones in
12 men and 12 women who said they had fallen in love within the past six months.
The researchers compared these hormone levels to those in 24 other volunteers
who were either single or in stable long-term relationships.
The first finding was that both men and women in love have considerably higher
levels of the stress hormone cortisol, indicating that courtship can be somewhat
stressful. "But the most intriguing finding is related to testosterone,"
says Marazziti.Split the difference Men who were in love had lower levels
of the male sex hormone testosterone - linked to aggression and sex drive
- than the other men. Love-struck women, in contrast, had higher levels of
testosterone than their counterparts, the team will report in Psychoneuroendocrinology.
"Men, in some way, had become more like women, and women had become like
men," says Marazziti. "It's as if nature wants to eliminate what
can be different in men and women, because it's more important to survive
[and mate] at this stage."
But is falling in love really responsible for these changes?
Andreas Bartels of University College London points out that the hormonal
changes could just be a result of increased sexual activity. "There's
a high degree of affection, but there's also, without any doubt, extremely
high sexual activity," he says.
Marazziti thinks that this explanation is unlikely, however, because in her
study those in the control group were having sex just as often as those in
the "in love" group.
Love is blind
What is more, other studies suggest that testosterone levels in men rise as
sexual activity increases (New Scientist, 27 November 1999). So if the hormonal
changes were just the result of sex, testosterone levels would be expected
to increase in men, rather than fall.
Converging levels of testosterone may not be the only thing that helps a man
and woman overcome their differences. Other research has shown that falling
in love really does make us blind to our partner's faults.
Bartels's team has found that when people look at their lovers, the neural
circuits that are normally associated with critical social assessment of other
people are suppressed (Neuroimage, vol 21, p 1155).
But the blissful state that is romantic love does not last. When Marazziti
retested the same people one or two years later, when they said they were
no longer madly in love, their hormone levels had returned to normal.

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