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Why do women have periods? - YouTube
Channel: TED-Ed
[6]
A handful of species on Earth
share a seemingly mysterious trait:
[11]
a menstrual cycle.
[13]
We're one of the select few.
[15]
Monkeys, apes, bats, humans,
and possibly elephant shrews
[19]
are the only mammals on Earth
that menstruate.
[22]
We also do it more than any other animal,
[25]
even though its a waste of nutrients
and can be a physical inconvenience.
[29]
So where's the sense in this
uncommon biological process?
[33]
The answer begins with pregnancy.
[35]
During this process, the body's resources
are cleverly used to shape
[39]
a suitable environment for a fetus,
[42]
creating an internal haven for a mother
to nurture her growing child.
[46]
In this respect,
pregnancy is awe-inspiring,
[50]
but that's only half the story.
[53]
The other half reveals that pregnancy
places a mother and her child at odds.
[58]
As for all living creatures,
[60]
the human body evolved to promote
the spread of its genes.
[63]
For the mother, that means
she should try to provide equally
[66]
for all her offspring.
[69]
But a mother and her fetus don't share
exactly the same genes.
[73]
The fetus inherits genes
from its father, as well,
[75]
and those genes can promote their own
survival by extracting
[79]
more than their fair share
of resources from the mother.
[83]
This evolutionary conflict of interests
[85]
places a woman and her unborn child
in a biological tug-of-war
[88]
that plays out inside the womb.
[92]
One factor contributing
to this internal tussle
[95]
is the placenta, the fetal organ that
connects to the mother's blood supply
[99]
and nourishes the fetus while it grows.
[102]
In most mammals, the placenta is confined
behind a barrier of maternal cells.
[107]
This barrier lets the mother control
the supply of nutrients to the fetus.
[112]
But in humans and a few other species,
[114]
the placenta actually penetrates right
into the mother's circulatory system
[118]
to directly access her blood stream.
[121]
Through its placenta, the fetus
pumps the mother's arteries with hormones
[125]
that keep them open to provide a permanent
flow of nutrient-rich blood.
[130]
A fetus with such unrestricted access
can manufacture hormones
[134]
to increase the mother's blood sugar,
dilate her arteries,
[137]
and inflate her blood pressure.
[140]
Most mammal mothers can expel
or reabsorb embryos if required,
[145]
but in humans, once the fetus is
connected to the blood supply,
[149]
severing that connection
can result in hemorrhage.
[153]
If the fetus develops poorly or dies,
[155]
the mother's health is endangered.
[158]
As it grows, a fetus's ongoing need
for resources can cause intense fatigue,
[163]
high blood pressure,
[165]
and conditions
like diabetes and preeclampsia.
[169]
Because of these risks,
[170]
pregnancy is always a huge,
and sometimes dangerous, investment.
[175]
So it makes sense that the body
should screen embryos carefully
[179]
to find out which ones
are worth the challenge.
[181]
This is where menstruation fits in.
[184]
Pregnancy starts with a process
called implantation,
[186]
where the embryo embeds itself
in the endometrium that lines the uterus.
[192]
The endometrium evolved to make
implantation difficult
[195]
so that only the healthy embryos
could survive.
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But in doing so,
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it also selected for the most
vigorously invasive embryos,
[204]
creating an evolutionary feedback loop.
[208]
The embryo engages in a complex,
exquisitely timed hormonal dialogue
[212]
that transforms the endometrium
to allow implantation.
[217]
What happens when
an embryo fails the test?
[220]
It might still manage to attach,
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or even get partly
through the endometrium.
[225]
As it slowly dies, it could leave
its mother vulnerable to infection,
[229]
and all the time, it may be emitting
hormonal signals that disrupt her tissues.
[235]
The body avoids this problem
by simply removing every possible risk.
[240]
Each time ovulation doesn't result
in a healthy pregnancy,
[244]
the womb gets rid
of its endometrial lining,
[247]
along with any unfertilized eggs,
sick, dying, or dead embryos.
[252]
That protective process
is known as menstruation,
[256]
leading to the period.
[259]
This biological trait,
bizarre as it may be,
[262]
sets us on course
for the continuation of the human race.
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