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Background: Increasing numbers of adolescents seek help for gender-identity questions. Consequently, requests for medical treatments, such as puberty suppression, are growing. However, studies investigating the neurobiological substrate of gender incongruence (when birth-assigned sex and gender identity do not align) are scarce, and knowledge about the effects of puberty suppression on the developing brain of transgender youth is limited.
Methods: Here we cross-sectionally investigated sex and gender differences in regional fractional anisotropy (FA) as measured by diffusion MR imaging, and the impact of puberty on alterations in the white-matter organization of 35 treatment-naive prepubertal children and 41 adolescents with gender incongruence, receiving puberty suppression. The transgender groups were compared with 79 age-matched, treatment-naive cisgender (when sex and gender align) peers.
Results: We found that transgender adolescents had lower FA in the bilateral inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus (IFOF), forceps major and corpus callosum than cisgender peers. In addition, average FA values of the right IFOF correlated negatively with adolescents' cumulative dosage of puberty suppressants received. Of note, prepubertal children also showed significant FA group differences in, again, the right IFOF and left cortico-spinal tract, but with the reverse pattern (transgender > cisgender) than was seen in adolescents.
Conclusions: Importantly, our results of lower FA (indexing less longitudinal organization, fiber coherence, and myelination) in the IFOF of gender-incongruent adolescents replicate prior findings in transgender adults, suggesting a salient neural correlate of gender incongruence. Findings highlight the complexity with which (pubertal) sex hormones impact white-matter development and add important insight into the neurobiological substrate associated with gender incongruence.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0033291721005547 | DOI Listing |
Injury
August 2025
Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
Background: Lateral-sided tibial plateau fractures are most common and can range from minor to very extensive injuries of the lateral plateau. The impact of fracture location and extent on functional outcomes remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate this relationship.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Youth Adolesc
September 2025
Faculty of Education, The University of Macau, Macao SAR, China.
Parents and adolescents can differ in their perceptions of parental involvement, yet most research relies on a single informant, potentially overlooking important discrepancies. Using data from 89,448 fifteen-year-olds (50.3% female) and their parents (78.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Endocrinol Metab
September 2025
Department of Paediatric Endocrinology, 156596 Bristol Royal Hospital for Children, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Objectives: 45, X/46, XY mosaicism is a complex chromosomal difference of sexual development, commonly associated with 45, X/46, XY karyotype. It presents a broad phenotypic spectrum, creating challenges in gender assignment. This report examines the management of a child with 45, X/46, XY mosaicism diagnosed in middle childhood, assigned female at birth but later exhibiting gender incongruence, highlighting dilemmas in pubertal induction after prophylactic gonadectomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Minim Invasive Gynecol
August 2025
Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
Objective: to assess the prevalence of surgically confirmed endometriosis among assigned-female-at-birth (AFAB) transgender and gender diverse (TGD) individuals undergoing laparoscopic pelvic surgery.
Design: retrospective multicenter cohort study from 2021 to 2024.
Setting: three academic medical centers in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.
BMC Sports Sci Med Rehabil
August 2025
School of Physical Education, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai, 200438, China.
Background: In competitive sports, elite athletes demonstrate exceptional proficiency in resolving sensorimotor conflicts, exemplified by the basketball head-fake phenomenon. Whether long-term basketball training leads to adaptive cognitive control in athletes and the underlying neural mechanisms is still unclear.
Methods: Using a spatial conflict task called Swimmy and functional magnetic resonance imaging, this study investigated the brain function of 50 basketball athletes and 55 gender- and age-matched healthy controls during the Swimmy tasks.