For decades,perverted sex videos science maintained an awkward relationship with women as research subjects. Basically, scientists ignored them for logistical and cultural reasons, hoping that studies involving men and male animals would apply to women as well.
Here's the not-so-surprising twist: That's actually not how biology works. Sex and gender matter a lot when you're testing a new drug, trying to identify a disease's risk factors or hunting for a cure. This gender blind spot has put women's health at a big disadvantage, but a study published this week in Nature Communicationscould dramatically change that.
SEE ALSO: Guys: It’s now possible to test your sperm via smartphoneThe study debuted a tool its inventors call Evatar (and yes, that's an intentional nod to the one and only Eve). The device is made up of plastic wells and containers that individually house a mouse ovary and human fallopian, uterine, cervical and liver tissue. It mimics the menstrual cycle through reproductive hormones produced by the ovary. While the miniature reproductive tract can't bleed, it can prompt the release of an egg from the ovary.
This little marvel of biology and engineering, known as a tissue chip, is no larger than a Kindle.
This 3D culture system is the first of its kind and it effectively gives researchers a tiny lab to test conditions like fertility, the effects of chemical exposure, and how well certain drugs work -- and not just in specific experiments overseen by scientists. Instead, the hope is that Evatar will eventually become so common that patients can show up at a doctor's office and have their own cells cultured in the device to see how their body reacts to a chemotherapy drug for ovarian cancer, a different type of birth control, new treatment for a sexually transmitted disease, or something else entirely.
"This is absolutely a victory for women's health," says study co-author, Kelly E. McKinnon, a doctoral candidate at Northwestern University.
As recently as a year ago, says McKinnon, basic research in drug development still predominantly relied on male mice subjects. Now that research incorporates postmenopausal women, which is an improvement yet still leaves many unanswered questions about how drugs affect women of childbearing age.
"We're really trying to address that gap and come up with a new system."
"We're really trying to address that gap and come up with a new system," says McKinnon.
The gap is an infamous one in medicine and science. Female sex hormones do present their own unique challenges in experiments because they regularly fluctuate, and that's partly why scientists defaulted to male human or animal study subjects. In the past, there were also ethical concerns about negatively affecting fertility for women of childbearing age, a worry that effectively excluded women from research while men continued to participate.
Even 30 years ago, researchers routinely conducted men-only studies. The groundbreaking research on taking aspirin to prevent a heart attack? That was done in the 1980s with 22,000 male participants. As retired Maryland Sen. Barbara Mikulski once recalled, researchers working on one aging study apparently didn't include women because there wasn't a ladies room available for female participants.
It wasn't until 1994, when Congress passed a law requiring the National Institutes of Health to include women in its clinical studies and analyze results by sex or gender, that things began to change.
Evatar, a collaborative project led by the Woodruff Lab at Northwestern University and funded partly by the NIH, is proof of how far we've come in just two decades. Dr. Les Reinlib, program director for the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, says the tool has the potential to help scientists understand the interaction between genes and environment as they never have before. For women's health, it could lead to important revelations about contraception, cancer, and fertility.
"This is a lot closer to the way people are," Reinlib says of Evatar's ability to model the female reproductive tract in three dimensions. "It provides cells the opportunity to respond the way they do in nature."
What it's not designed to do is become sentient or serve as an artificial womb for a test-tube baby. Evatar's ovaries and human tissues are not connected to each other as a reconstruction of a woman's reproductive organs. Instead they are linked via tiny channels that allow the hormones to flow throughout the system. Even though the team mimicked the hormonal response of pregnancy in its experiment, the egg was not transported from the fallopian tube to the uterine tissue. There also isn't a brain to signal the beginning of ovulation through the pituitary gland -- just a researcher jumpstarting the system with doses of reproductive hormones.
The Woodruff lab is working toward using the tool for testing drug toxicity related to female reproductive organs. There also plans to create a male equivalent of Evatar called -- wait for it -- Adatar.
In the meantime, we get the thrill of waiting to see if Evatar indeed catapults women's reproductive health and medicine into the 21st century.
Topics Health
Trump's selfJ.K. Rowling perfectly explains why the Trumps wouldn't be in SlytheriniOS 10.3 is here: Everything you need to knowThis author's 1975 letter shutting down a fan is so hilariously bluntNew York to London in three hours? This jet could get you thereReporter learns why you shouldn't let random Aussies speak on live TVWiz Khalifa is getting called out for these Instagram pics by Pablo Escobar's graveHere's why all the sudden the banks love Snapchat — but still hate TwitterReporter learns why you shouldn't let random Aussies speak on live TVThis author's 1975 letter shutting down a fan is so hilariously bluntAmazon's Kindle is currently a bargain for Prime membersDestructive winds lash Australia as Cyclone Debbie hitsFive burning questions we have about 'Stranger Things' Season 2Truecaller gets payment support and Duo integration as it trickles to feature phonesThe internet is very confused by this shirt at the Trump Tower gift shopPaper artist transforms historical landmarks into silly scenesThe tricky art of marketing women's empowerment in the era of TrumpIn its bid for world domination, Amazon buys up main competition in the Middle EastWill Smith and the 'Fresh Prince of BelElon Musk wants to merge your brain with computers People are turning the debate into a glorious sing Fyre Festival designer Oren Aks says he's proud of the work he did with FuckJerry Trump just said he and his running mate disagree on a major issue Look at this colossal storm on Uranus Ken Bone was the light in the dark second presidential debate tunnel The independent workforce is bigger than anyone thought Trump’s idea of debate prep is a Facebook Live with Bill Clinton’s accusers LOL, bye: Facebook’s teen meme project is dead before it was released Taking a selfie while high After Uber bought Jump, riders started e Motorola Moto G7 Play, G7 Power, G7 hands Twitter loses millions of users, but still makes record quarterly revenue All of Earth's coldest years on record happened more than 90 years ago Pancakes in space? No that's just the mysterious MU69 The official 'Captain Marvel' website is straight out of the 90s Michonne is leaving 'The Walking Dead' during Season 10 Victims reclaim their own narratives at Sundance 2019 Dictionary fact This eagle stuck in a car grille, but okay, is a metaphor for America during this election Former Republican party chair just summed up the debate in one GIF
1.2865s , 10519.703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【perverted sex videos】,Unobstructed Information Network