Birth control pills change women's brains

One study found that taking birth control pills contained hormones that increased the amount of gray matter in a woman's brain.

Since its inception, birth control pills have existed for 50 years. Popular Science says pharmaceutical companies are constantly producing pills with reduced levels of hormones, thereby reducing the number of side effects they cause.

But many women still feel some negative phenomena when taking oral contraceptives such as reducing sexual excitement, gratuitous boredom and constant depression. Reducing sexual excitement is considered the most worrying phenomenon, because it makes birth control pills become destructive for couples. However, medical experts know very little about the effects that birth control pills can cause in a woman's body.

Picture 1 of Birth control pills change women's brains
Artwork: stylishandtrendy.com.

Belinda Pletzer , a scientist at the University of Salzburg in Austria, was the first to understand the effect of birth control pills on the brain. This expert and colleagues used magnetic resonance imaging and three-dimensional morphological methods to study the brains of women taking hormones containing hormones and compared the results with those of unused women. . They found that women in the drug group had greater levels of gray matter in many areas of the brain, such as the prefrontal cortex (which controls thinking and decision-making activities).

Many people have confirmed that birth control pills make women smarter than when they haven't taken them yet. However, the research team said they disagree with that statement. According to them, the brain acts like a honeycomb, meaning that every thinking activity requires a combination of neurons. So we cannot say that the increase in the amount of gray matter in some areas of the brain makes people more intelligent.