Quote from: kelly_aus on February 18, 2015, 04:05:49 PM
Due to the somewhat odd nature of my family, I know my mum didn't actually take anything - not even 'vitamins'.. I also had a 'normal' T level at 12/13 when I had some surgery done - hydrocele repair.
No one's claiming that all cases of transness are due to drugs like DES, just that exposure to external hormones looks like it's one of the things that can make it happen. Anything at all that lowers T production or blocks its effects in genetic males, or increases T production/mimics the effects of androgens in genetic females, could in principle lead to someone becoming trans, if it exerts its effects during the critical period for brain development (which, in humans, seems to be the second and third trimester of prenatal development). It's quite difficult to say unequivocally that you weren't exposed to DES though, as it saw a lot of use as a growth promoter in poultry and cattle, and there are known to have been several large scale food contamination incidents in which thousands of people developed symptoms of estrogen exposure. There's also at least one incident where several batches of children's medicines were inadvertently contaminated with enough DES to cause breast development to occur.
It's quite interesting that you developed a hydrocele. The same happened to me too. It looks like it's one of the things that can occur when T is suppressed during your prenatal development (I think I posted a link a while ago to a paper showing that cryptorchidism, hydrocele and inguinal hernia are all defects that are thought to be linked to androgen suppression).
Violet Bloom:
QuoteI found the mention of progressive illness interesting. From mid-puberty onward for about twenty years I slowly but surely felt worse and worse. My nerves were always running way-high almost like a mild electric current flowing through my body, I was getting chronically tired and I was experiencing nausea almost every morning which often was enough that I wouldn't eat breakfast. My mind also felt like it was racing and couldn't slow down (it's really hard to describe the feeling - almost like a pressure squeezing my skull).
In my case, I was fairly happy throughout my childhood, as soon as I hit puberty everything went horribly wrong. Although some of it was undoubtedly due to isolation and bullying, I think hormones probably played a part too. I'd go through cycles of being energized to an almost manic degree through to being deeply depressed. I used to eat like a horse without putting any weight on either. Then, around the time I turned 30, my metabolism changed somehow. I started to put on weight, and also started growing hair on my chest and to become progressively more male-looking (up until then I'd only had vellus body hair and was very androgynous-looking). Psychologically I became a lot more stable too. I married, and settled down into a moderately successful career in computing (although I never felt very happy with life, and had a nagging feeling of something being wrong, that I was somehow different from other people, that never entirely went away).
Then, shortly after my 43rd birthday, something changed again. I had a couple of weeks during which I felt very horny, and then my sex drive vanished (almost literally overnight), and I began to develop most of the symptoms of acute hypogonadism (e.g. as described on this page:
http://www.griffinmedical.com/male_hormone_modulation_therapy.html). That page is about developing low T as a part of the normal ageing process, although in my case it was far from normal, being a very abrupt change rather than a gradual one.
That's how things stayed until 2011, when I found out about DES and realised that I had symptoms of hypogonadism, and started on the HRT that I'm currently taking. So in my case it was more like a series of quite abrupt stepwise changes rather than a gradual downwards progression. I actually felt reasonably well healthwise (apart from never being physically very strong) up until the age of 43, and since starting HRT I've again been feeling fairly well most of the time.
Some other meds that are likely to have T-suppressing effects and are commonly used in problem pregnancies are: hydroxyprogesterone caproate (a progestin), and corticosteroids (eg prednisone, dexamethasone etc).
I'd likewise be interested to know whether there are any stats for the percentage of trans folks born following drug free pregnancies, vs ones where medical treatment had to be administered.