I will let anyone buy this spot for $400 a month. It can be very lucrative. 100,000 uniques see this spot per month. I just can't seem to find an affiliate who doesn't cheat and can use this spot. You can also buy the one below it. email me

Thursday, February 08, 2007

Women get hot for sweat

WASHINGTON, Feb 7 (Reuters Life!) - For women, apparently there's nothing like the smell of a man's sweat.

Researchers at the University of California at Berkeley said women who sniffed a chemical found in male sweat experienced elevated levels of an important hormone, along with higher sexual arousal, faster heart rate and other effects.

They said the study, published this week in the Journal of Neuroscience, represents the first direct evidence that people secrete a scent that influences the hormones of the opposite sex.

The study focused on androstadienone, considered a male chemical signal. Previous research had established that a whiff of it affected women's mood, sexual and physiological arousal and brain activation. Its impact on hormones was less clear.

A derivative of testosterone, it is found in male sweat as well as in saliva and semen. It smells somewhat musky.

"It really tells us that a lot of things can be triggered by smelling sweat," Claire Wyart, who led the study, said in an interview on Wednesday.

The researchers measured levels of the hormone cortisol in the saliva of 48 female undergraduates at Berkeley, average age of about 21, after the women took 20 sniffs from a jar of androstadienone. Cortisol is secreted by the body to help maintain proper arousal and sense of well-being, respond to stress and other functions.

Cortisol levels in the women who smelled androstadienone shot up within roughly 15 minutes and stayed elevated for up to an hour. Consistent with previous research, the women also reported improved mood, higher sexual arousal, and had increased blood pressure, heart rate and breathing.

YEAST

For comparison's sake, women also smelled baking yeast, which did not trigger the same effects.

This was the first time that smelling a specific chemical secreted by people was shown to affect hormonal levels, the researchers said. The women had no skin contact with androstadienone.

The researchers used only heterosexual women in the study out of concern that homosexual women may respond differently to this male chemical.

Wyart said while this marked the first time a specific component of male sweat was demonstrated to influence women's hormones, other components of sweat may do similar things.

The study did not determine whether the increase in cortisol levels triggered mood or arousal changes or whether those changes themselves caused the cortisol elevation.

The researchers also said their findings suggest a better way to stimulate cortisol levels in patients who need it, such as those with Addison's disease. Instead of giving cortisol in pill form, which has side effects such as peptic ulcers, osteoporosis, weight gain and mood disorders, smelling a chemical like androstadienone could be used to affect cortisol levels, they suggested.

Labels: ,

adriana lima
Winona Ryder
kristen bell
Jennifer Love Hewitt
Gwyneth Paltrow
devon aoki
cindy crawford
christina ricci
charlize theron
cameron diaz
lauren graham
tila tequila
hayden panettiere
buffy
charisma carpenter
Lily Allen
demi moore
elizabeth hurley
halle berry
kate winslet
keira knightley
mila kunis
Vanessa Anne Hudgens
alessandra ambrosio
alexandra kemp
ali larter
alicia keys
alyssa milano
amanda tapping
ana claudia michels
angel faith
angelina jolie
anna kournikova)
aria giovanni
aurora robles
avril lavigne
beyonce knowles
britney spears
brooke burke
cameron diaz
caprice bourret
carmen electra
charlotte church
christina aguilera
Karen Cliche






My Buddy Jordan