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PBIO-537
Survey of Sex-Specific Medicine
PBIO-537 - Sex Differences in Physiology and
Pathophysiology
Course Directors:
Darren Roesch,
PhD and
Kathryn
Sandberg, PhD
(2 credits, fall)
See the
PBIO-537 Course Syllabus
What is the difference between sex and gender? How do
chromosomal and hormonal differences between boys and girls and men and
women affect physiology and cognition differently?
What are the reasons behind sex differences in incidence
and age of disease onset, diagnostic markers and efficacy of diagnostic
tools, disease severity and progression, and in treatment, drug efficacy
and prognosis? And, why do women live longer than men? This course
introduces students to the emerging field of sex-based biology and
gender-specific medicine. Through didactic instruction and critical
review of the primary literature, students will explore sex gender
differences in the brain (including psychology, psychiatry, and
sociology) and cardio-renal, pulmonary, gastroenterological, and musculo-skeletal
systems. In addition, differences in infectious disease, oncology, aging
and in drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics is covered. This
course is intended for senior undergraduate students and graduate
students from diverse backgrounds.
For more information, contact Dr. Roesch at
roeschd@georgetown.edu
To register for this course, click here:
limited.georgetown.edu/StudentAccess/ |