Susan's Place Logo

News:

According to Google Analytics 25,259,719 users made visits accounting for 140,758,117 Pageviews since December 2006

Main Menu

Could these be signs of an inter sex condition?

Started by Paige0000, January 08, 2014, 10:55:53 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Paige0000

Hi everyone the topic of intersex has me very intrigued and as I ponder over the various variations of the condition I think of my own body and wonder if I may have some form of an intersex condition.

Firstly my fingers have always been long and slender and my index fingers are slightly longer (3-4mm) than my ring fingers which i've heard are a common feminine trait.

Next even pre hrt I've always had some minor breast development (minor but even my endo thought I may have pre existing breast tissue when he first examined them).

Thirdly my natural voice has always lingered on a higher spectrum that the average cis male.

Fourthly though I developed body hair it was never truely substancial at all.

Finally my frame overall was alot slender that most cis men I grew up with plus I was always told I had a girls butt hehe  :D. Plus my hips seemed a fair deal boarder (around 39inches circumference) too.

I probably don't have anything out of the ordinary but it's interesting to think about none the less. :)
Be yourself regardless of what other may think of you. Tis your life not theirs. :)
  •  

Jamie D

It's possible.  Individually, those traits could just be within the realm of natural variation.  Together, it might point to something else.  Not sure if a battery of genetic tests would help anything.  You have a well-defined sense of self.  You are moving forward with your transition.

Would knowing if you had mild AIS, or some other IS condition, help you cope better?
  •  

Paige0000

Quote from: Jamie D on January 08, 2014, 11:26:13 PM
It's possible.  Individually, those traits could just be within the realm of natural variation.  Together, it might point to something else.  Not sure if a battery of genetic tests would help anything.  You have a well-defined sense of self.  You are moving forward with your transition.

Would knowing if you had mild AIS, or some other IS condition, help you cope better?

Cope better not really? Like you said I do have a strong sense of self and having an IS condition or not wouldn't matter to me. It still would be an interesting thing to discover though  :)
Be yourself regardless of what other may think of you. Tis your life not theirs. :)
  •  

Cindy

Ask your endo to karotype you. To be honest it is the only way to find out.

But as you said, would it make any difference?

BTW I'm in Melbourne tomorrow if you want to catch up!
  •  

Jessica Merriman

When they find the gorgeous and passing gene in your code will you have them clone it and share it with me? I'll pay all cost's associated! *giggle*  :laugh:
  •  

Paige0000

Quote from: Cindy on January 09, 2014, 12:46:05 AM
Ask your endo to karotype you. To be honest it is the only way to find out.

But as you said, would it make any difference?

BTW I'm in Melbourne tomorrow if you want to catch up!

Wish I could Cindy but I'm abit far off (Living in Orange) :-\. I would love to met you one day though :)
Be yourself regardless of what other may think of you. Tis your life not theirs. :)
  •  

Paige0000

Quote from: Jessica Merriman on January 09, 2014, 12:58:25 AM
When they find the gorgeous and passing gene in your code will you have them clone it and share it with me? I'll pay all cost's associated! *giggle*  :laugh:

"blushes" Oh Jess I'm not gorgeous stop it :). Hehe why pay for something you already have ;) xx
Be yourself regardless of what other may think of you. Tis your life not theirs. :)
  •  

Cindy

Quote from: Paige0000 on January 09, 2014, 01:03:56 AM
Wish I could Cindy but I'm abit far off (Living in Orange) :-\. I would love to met you one day though :)

Whoops sorry Sis, I thought you were a Melbourne lass!

One day though!!
  •  

Xhianil

Quote from: Paige0000 on January 09, 2014, 12:43:32 AM
Cope better not really? Like you said I do have a strong sense of self and having an IS condition or not wouldn't matter to me. It still would be an interesting thing to discover though  :)

not to mention it might help lower costs of stuff through insurance if you are.
  •  

HughE

Do you have eunuchoid bodily proportions?

A "eunuchoid" body structure indicates that you had below normal male levels of testosterone during childhood and puberty, and is something that's often associated with intersex conditions. It consists of having:

* long, slender arms and legs
* legs that are significantly longer than the height of your body from the waist up (the two should be about equal in men)
* an armspan 3cm or more greater than your height
* sparse or very fine body hair
* a female pubic hair pattern (like an upside down triangle and confined to the pubic region)
* youthful, feminine looking facial features
* an inability to build upper body muscle
* gynecomastica

perhaps you might have a female digit ratio and a female carrying angle too. Basically you end up with a body structure that's more like the female members of your family than the male ones.

Although I don't know of any scientific studies confirming it, my impression is that a fairly large proportion of MTF trans people do have this kind of body structure, which would support the idea that transness  is associated with lower than normal testosterone and is a kind of intersex condition. I've got female-typical proportions, and my testosterone's been below normal male all my life (I identify as bigender rather than as a woman though, so I'm not planning on surgery or full female HRT!).

I've seen several studies of trans men prior to starting HRT, showing that they have much higher than normal rates of "hyperandrogenism" (when more testosterone than is normal for a woman is being produced), and that they often have masculine body proportions, so there's certainly evidence for some kind of intersex thing going on in their case. I think probably the only reason the same hasn't been found in MTFs is that nobody's looked for it.
  •  

Paige0000

Quote from: HughE on February 04, 2014, 05:48:34 PM
Do you have eunuchoid bodily proportions?

A "eunuchoid" body structure indicates that you had below normal male levels of testosterone during childhood and puberty, and is something that's often associated with intersex conditions. It consists of having:

* long, slender arms and legs (Yes definitely)
* legs that are significantly longer than the height of your body from the waist up (the two should be about equal in men) Well I'm 173cm total, 65cm waist to head and have an 86cm leg inseam.
* an armspan 3cm or more greater than your height (yes my total span is 178cm)
* sparse or very fine body hair (Not immensely so but definitely noticeably less sparse and thick than the norm)
* a female pubic hair pattern (like an upside down triangle and confined to the pubic region) (Yes, definitely)
* youthful, feminine looking facial features (Yes I've always had a more youthful and softer facial appearance overall)
* an inability to build upper body muscle (Was definitely a struggle when I was living in denial mode, I got some but it was never a lot and I worked out like crazy, ate healthy, rested etc.)
* gynecomastica (Had a bit of breast growth yes)

perhaps you might have a female digit ratio and a female carrying angle too. Basically you end up with a body structure that's more like the female members of your family than the male ones.

Although I don't know of any scientific studies confirming it, my impression is that a fairly large proportion of MTF trans people do have this kind of body structure, which would support the idea that transness  is associated with lower than normal testosterone and is a kind of intersex condition. I've got female-typical proportions, and my testosterone's been below normal male all my life (I identify as bigender rather than as a woman though, so I'm not planning on surgery or full female HRT!).

I've seen several studies of trans men prior to starting HRT, showing that they have much higher than normal rates of "hyperandrogenism" (when more testosterone than is normal for a woman is being produced), and that they often have masculine body proportions, so there's certainly evidence for some kind of intersex thing going on in their case. I think probably the only reason the same hasn't been found in MTFs is that nobody's looked for it.

Comments in Bold.  :) Interesting I can't say I've ever heard of a "eunuchoid" body structure but it's quite intriguing none the less. Thankyou for the insight Hugh.
Be yourself regardless of what other may think of you. Tis your life not theirs. :)
  •  

sad panda

Quote from: HughE on February 04, 2014, 05:48:34 PM
Do you have eunuchoid bodily proportions?

A "eunuchoid" body structure indicates that you had below normal male levels of testosterone during childhood and puberty, and is something that's often associated with intersex conditions. It consists of having:

* long, slender arms and legs
* legs that are significantly longer than the height of your body from the waist up (the two should be about equal in men)
* an armspan 3cm or more greater than your height
* sparse or very fine body hair
* a female pubic hair pattern (like an upside down triangle and confined to the pubic region)
* youthful, feminine looking facial features
* an inability to build upper body muscle
* gynecomastica

perhaps you might have a female digit ratio and a female carrying angle too. Basically you end up with a body structure that's more like the female members of your family than the male ones.

Although I don't know of any scientific studies confirming it, my impression is that a fairly large proportion of MTF trans people do have this kind of body structure, which would support the idea that transness  is associated with lower than normal testosterone and is a kind of intersex condition. I've got female-typical proportions, and my testosterone's been below normal male all my life (I identify as bigender rather than as a woman though, so I'm not planning on surgery or full female HRT!).

I think you are thinking of an ectomorph body type. Most MTF trans people have normal male bodies.

Intersex conditions have to do with reproductive health and genital ambiguity, they're not really about someone's body, they just happen to affect the body. There's lots of non-intersex conditions that can affect body shape and proportions.
  •  

HughE

Quote from: sad panda on February 09, 2014, 07:17:53 PM
I think you are thinking of an ectomorph body type. Most MTF trans people have normal male bodies.

Intersex conditions have to do with reproductive health and genital ambiguity, they're not really about someone's body, they just happen to affect the body. There's lots of non-intersex conditions that can affect body shape and proportions.

No, the "eunuchoid" body type I've described is the result of having below normal male levels of testosterone during childhood and puberty, and is something that's commonly seen in intersex conditions such as Klinefelter's syndrome or Kallman's syndrome. The low testosterone alters the way your bones and muscles grow, so you end up with a build more like a woman's than a man's. I'm one of the ones affected btw. Although I've got normal male genitals and don't seem to have any of the usual causes of intersex, nonetheless I have (or at least had until I started taking hormones a couple of years ago) all the things mentioned in that list. If you look at photos of me when I was younger, my body shape is much more like that of the female members of my family than the male ones.

I'm not aware of any formal scientific studies looking at pre-HRT body structure in trans women, but going on what I've seen and been told, trans women in general seem to have a much higher incidence of having a "eunuchoid" (or more female -typical) body structure than is the case for the cis male population.

Although no one seems to have done the research on trans women, there are several studies of trans men showing that they have much higher rates of PCOS (an endocrine disorder associated with abnormally high androgen levels) than cis women, and that they tend to have a more male typical build too (e.g. see http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9101031?dopt=Abstract).

Obviously, if there are often detectable hormonal and physical differences between trans people and the cis population then it proves that transness isn't a purely psychological condition at all, there's an actual physical basis for it.
  •  

sad panda

Quote from: HughE on February 10, 2014, 06:40:15 AM
No, the "eunuchoid" body type I've described is the result of having below normal male levels of testosterone during childhood and puberty, and is something that's commonly seen in intersex conditions such as Klinefelter's syndrome or Kallman's syndrome. The low testosterone alters the way your bones and muscles grow, so you end up with a build more like a woman's than a man's. I'm one of the ones affected btw. Although I've got normal male genitals and don't seem to have any of the usual causes of intersex, nonetheless I have (or at least had until I started taking hormones a couple of years ago) all the things mentioned in that list. If you look at photos of me when I was younger, my body shape is much more like that of the female members of my family than the male ones.

I'm not aware of any formal scientific studies looking at pre-HRT body structure in trans women, but going on what I've seen and been told, trans women in general seem to have a much higher incidence of having a "eunuchoid" (or more female -typical) body structure than is the case for the cis male population.

Although no one seems to have done the research on trans women, there are several studies of trans men showing that they have much higher rates of PCOS (an endocrine disorder associated with abnormally high androgen levels) than cis women, and that they tend to have a more male typical build too (e.g. see http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9101031?dopt=Abstract).

Obviously, if there are often detectable hormonal and physical differences between trans people and the cis population then it proves that transness isn't a purely psychological condition at all, there's an actual physical basis for it.

Eunuchoid proportions are not an intersex condition. :S Klinefelter's is a rare chromosomal abnormality and only a very teeny portion of the trans population has it. It's not on a spectrum, ya either have it or you don't. Eunuchoid proportions are bc of a long pubertal growth window due to low estrogen. The reason that has anything to do with low T is because low T means lower estrogen... but so does just simply being skinny (an ectomorph) because T is converted to E in fat cells. So if you are naturally skinny, you will also probably have sort of eunuchoid (skeletal) proportions, no matter what your T level is.

None of this has anything to do with intersex conditions except in the presence of a chromosomal abnormality. Looking feminine is not an intersex condition, but also, eunuchoid (skeletal) proportions are actually the opposite of feminine. Women's growth plates fuse very early because of estrogen so they have proportionately shorter legs and arms.. eunuchoid limbs fuse very late and are long. Long limbs, long faces, big jaws, big hands, big feet, big everything. XXY people look feminine only because they have severely low T. Basically, they look unmasculine. It's hard to call it feminine either though. They are not usually skinny though. Ectomorphs OTOH, who are skinny, do look especially masculine.

Not that MTFs typically have eunuchoid shapes. Cuz eunuchoid shapes also have low masculinization and lots of bodyfat. Again, eunuchoid people are tall because they have low T (which means low E) as per the name, which makes a more distinct shape. But you can be tall from having low bodyfat as well, and have high T and low E. And afaik this is the case for most tall MTFs.

So, just trying to reiterate that there is not a spectrum from tall male to XXY. They are unrelated. XXY is all or nothing and very few MTFs are XXY and very few MTFs are intersex. Low T is also never a form of intersex when it doesn't interfere with genital development or fertility. Intersex is a term that refers to a specific type of physical disorder, it's not just an adjective. It only takes a little T during development to significantly masculinize a brain. Most males need to be severely insensitive to androgens, or severely underexposed, to reliably develop a female gender and sexual identity. Most MTFs do not fit the same model and were sufficiently exposed to T to masculinize their brain and you can see that in MTF sexuality for example which is overwhelmingly gynephilic.

Umm.. now to be fair, I'm sure if you did a complete statistical study, trans people would have a higher incidence of intersex condition than the general population. But that doesn't say much about the average trans person. It just means that the people who do have intersex conditions are much more likely to transition than the general population (though you can't take that out of context either... the vast majority of intersex people do not reassign their gender and never express an interest to do so.)

I'm sorry this was so longwinded, I'm just frustrated with this uncomfortable attachment to IS issues from the trans community. The IS community is overall fairly hostile towards the trans community and ya can't blame them. If you have symptoms of an IS condition, then that is perfectly reasonable... you should definitely get tested and try to get your concerns addressed. But don't try to turn the trans community into an extension of the IS spectrum. Trans people already have more and better legal and medical support/awareness/documentation/representation than IS people so there is nothing to gain by saying trans people are some form of IS. It's just needlessly burying issues (infant genital surgery/mutilation and forced assignments, mismanagement and poor awareness of unique health concerns) that already desperately struggle for good advocacy.
  •  

HughE

Human beings are so socially complex that you can't say anything to do with our psychology is 100 percent down to one cause, but most cases of MTF transsexuality appear to be due to there being below normal male levels of testosterone present during the second half of the pregnancy. This results in the brain becoming incompletely masculinised (while FTM transsexuality is due to the opposite situation, inappropriately high levels of androgens that result in the brain of a female fetus being masculinised). There's a fairly in depth discussion of the crucial role testosterone plays in masculinising the brain here:

http://www.shb-info.org/sexbrain.html

Sad panda, with your description of big jaws and big everything, it sounds like you're confusing eunuchoid habitus with a completely unrelated condition, acromegaly. If you have a look at the Wikipedia page for Klinefelter's syndrome, there's a photo showing the typical body structure that develops when someone has below normal male testosterone during childhood and puberty. Basically you end up with a body that looks a bit like a cross between a man's and a woman's.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klinefelters

As mentioned in that article, this generally becomes less apparent in adulthood (as happened in my case), it seems that even below normal male levels of testosterone will gradually masculinise the body given enough time.

I've chatted online with some XXY's. Most of them don't fit the Klinefelter's stereotype at all, and only found out about their condition by accident. The ones I've chatted to mostly don't seem to fully identify as male, but more commonly experience a "genderfluid" gender identity. That's a bit different from what I experience. Mine's very polarised, there are parts of me that identify solidly as male whereas other parts identify quite strongly as female. Another difference is that XXY causes primary hypogonadism, whereas I'm definitely suffering from secondary hypogonadism. There seem to be quite a lot of similarities in terms of life experiences between myself, XXYs and trans women though, including shyness and being bullied as a teenager, and learning to create a fake male exterior as a survival mechanism. The main difference is that trans women feel so dysphoric that they're compelled to change their physical sex, whereas XXYs don't generally seem to experience that level of dysphoria.

There's a lot of argument as to what constitutes intersex, it seems that there's one very vocal group that insists the term only applies to genital development and nothing else. Based on my own experiences and what I've seen of the effects of a drug called diethylstilbestrol, that's a very arbitrary decision, since there's clearly a great deal of sexual dimorphism in brain development as well as genital development. I think a more sensible definition for intersex, is that it's where someone's prenatal development partly went down the male pathway and partly down the female one.
  •  

sad panda

Male growth basically is acromegaly compared to female growth... XXY guys do have a less masculine fat pattern and a higher bodyfat percentage but they are way taller and larger than cis women on average..

And again non-intersex MTFs and XXY guys are apples and oranges. XXY do not have the same normally developed testes that bio guys do.

I guess you can call it whatever you want but sex is basically binary, it exists for reproduction so intersex is the in-between that is not viable for reproduction. Intersex conditions are mutations that impair a binary development. Feminized brains don't impair fertility on their own, so there is no point in calling that intersexed, but I don't get the point anyway, cuz there's no material proof that MTFs have feminized brains, it's never really replicated or extended beyond the BSTc thing which could mean anything, and I've read studies that found they were closer to male brains. And I think if you consider like the higher incidence of autism it might even be the case a lot of the time. Some MTFs are actually hyper masculine, not that that is wrong.

The whole point is that transgender issues are already legitimized and trans people's rights are getting more and more advocacy and protection everyday while intersex people are struggling to get the same level of awareness for their very different physical issues. Whatever your body is like, you don't have the same physical concerns and health issues as intersex people. There is nothing to gain by making trans a subset of intersex except to drown out the voice of medically IS people.  It's so unfair. Trans people constantly tear apart IS support communities too by trying to convince people they belong there but not actually having the health issues, then starting a bunch of drama :-\

Idk... why isn't transsexual good enough? Why does it need a new term? If you want it to be more legitimate bc it's recognized as not a choice you are also saying it's not valid to choose something that is not your biology. So you'd be actually denying a lot of trans people legitimacy bc they don't have the right brain sex. That is dumb. Kinda reminds me of Blanchard who claims straight MTFs are more valid than lesbian MTFs. It's probably half true too (that they are more feminine). Straight MTFs almost definitely have more feminine brains overall. That doesn't mean they are more valid or deserve to transition more.
  •  

genderhell

Quote from: sad panda on February 10, 2014, 05:36:19 PM

Idk... why isn't transsexual good enough? Why does it need a new term? If you want it to be more legitimate bc it's recognized as not a choice you are also saying it's not valid to choose something that is not your biology. So you'd be actually denying a lot of trans people legitimacy bc they don't have the right brain sex. That is dumb. Kinda reminds me of Blanchard who claims straight MTFs are more valid than lesbian MTFs. It's probably half true too (that they are more feminine). Straight MTFs almost definitely have more feminine brains overall. That doesn't mean they are more valid or deserve to transition more.

I tell the doctors I am "transgendered", however, intersex people can have a different experience.

My dad is a MTF autistic transgendered person too.

Me:
- MTF trans person
- diagnosed with autism
- chemical hell in my brain that trans people don't seem to have
- displaced jaw from hormones (TMJ disorder)
- learning disabilities / delayed development
- speech disabilities until around age 32 due to the jaw and wrong hormones
- could not walk for 2 weeks after my first spiro pill
- personality suppressed for many years - even after HRT - nine years until full personality emergence (my first post here)
- age forty one my personality was emerged - something I am embarrassed to write actually

- different perspective on what is "gender dysphoria" than apparently most here (wrote about it in the past here)
- GD to me is not about dressing or wanting to be female, but for "liberating" my personality from the hormones and tendon/jaw dislodgement
- cannot relate to the trans people that come here and ask, "Am I trans?" or have any equivocation about it
- executive functioning problems in how I function but not mentally (for example, the neighbor called the police last year and said a retarded person [me] let the dog run free so they see me as retarded)
- still living in my mom's basement in my middle forties because of functioning/socialization problems (autism)
- the doctors will say, "You are not like the other ones" ...

-goal is not to be a "functional woman" because that will never happen.
-gender queer person is the best I can attain I think with my functioning problems
  •  

Elegant_Evelyn

Looks like people need to remember the difference between sex and gender again.   :-\
  •  

genderhell

Quote from: Elegant_Evelyn on February 18, 2014, 06:58:14 PM
Looks like people need to remember the difference between sex and gender again.   :-\


What is most disturbing to me is to see the DSM does not address trans-intersexed people with autism.   

The "trans condition" varies in people, so it makes sense to me that each sub-type should be identified, so that doctors can understand why a trans person might present differently. Doctors have even told me "... you are not like the others". All I can do is shrug.

This is detrimental to the trans community too. Early-on when I did not know much about the trans condition, I would go to doctors, and put the condition in my terms, not the DSM terms, and the doctors would think I am delusional. Their opinions may have been influenced by my autism, and executive functioning problems, nevertheless, they first prescribed me different kinds of anti-psychotics (Resperdal, Zyprexa) to help me with my "delusions".

I probably left those doctors and emergency room staff with the impression that trans people are nuts. So I would not want to be the future trans people that go to see those doctors.


  •  

HughE

"Genderhell", one thing to be aware of is that being trans can have effects that look a lot like the symptoms of an autism spectrum disorder.

To start with, you tend to have difficulty fitting in with your assigned sex, and (particularly if you have feminine body language like I have) you can become the target of bullying too. The result is that you end up quite socially withdrawn, and that can look a lot like Asperger's.

I think part of the problem in my case at least was hormonal too, I used to have massive mood swings which I now think were being caused by my testosterone production surging to a high level and then collapsing. After starting on hormones, I've felt much happier and more at peace with myself than since my childhood.

You could find that, once your gender issues are addressed, your symptoms of autism improve or maybe even go away altogether.
  •