Why do women have periods

A handful of species on Earth
share a seemingly mysterious trait:

a menstrual cycle.

We’re one of the select few.

Monkeys, apes, bats, humans,
and possibly elephant shrews

are the only mammals on Earth
that menstruate.

We also do it more than any other animal,

even though its a waste of nutrients
and can be a physical inconvenience.

So where’s the sense in this
uncommon biological process?

The answer begins with pregnancy.

During this process, the body’s resources
are cleverly used to shape

a suitable environment for a fetus,

creating an internal haven for a mother
to nurture her growing child.

In this respect,
pregnancy is awe-inspiring,

but that’s only half the story.

The other half reveals that pregnancy
places a mother and her child at odds.

As for all living creatures,

the human body evolved to promote
the spread of its genes.

For the mother, that means
she should try to provide equally

for all her offspring.

But a mother and her fetus don’t share
exactly the same genes.

The fetus inherits genes
from its father, as well,

and those genes can promote their own
survival by extracting

more than their fair share
of resources from the mother.

This evolutionary conflict of interests

places a woman and her unborn child
in a biological tug-of-war

that plays out inside the womb.

One factor contributing
to this internal tussle

is the placenta, the fetal organ that
connects to the mother’s blood supply

and nourishes the fetus while it grows.

In most mammals, the placenta is confined
behind a barrier of maternal cells.

This barrier lets the mother control
the supply of nutrients to the fetus.

But in humans and a few other species,

the placenta actually penetrates right
into the mother’s circulatory system

to directly access her blood stream.

Through its placenta, the fetus
pumps the mother’s arteries with hormones

that keep them open to provide a permanent
flow of nutrient-rich blood.

A fetus with such unrestricted access
can manufacture hormones

to increase the mother’s blood sugar,
dilate her arteries,

and inflate her blood pressure.

Most mammal mothers can expel
or reabsorb embryos if required,

but in humans, once the fetus is
connected to the blood supply,

severing that connection
can result in hemorrhage.

If the fetus develops poorly or dies,

the mother’s health is endangered.

As it grows, a fetus’s ongoing need
for resources can cause intense fatigue,

high blood pressure,

and conditions
like diabetes and preeclampsia.

Because of these risks,

pregnancy is always a huge,
and sometimes dangerous, investment.

So it makes sense that the body
should screen embryos carefully

to find out which ones
are worth the challenge.

This is where menstruation fits in.

Pregnancy starts with a process
called implantation,

where the embryo embeds itself
in the endometrium that lines the uterus.

The endometrium evolved to make
implantation difficult

so that only the healthy embryos
could survive.

But in doing so,

it also selected for the most
vigorously invasive embryos,

creating an evolutionary feedback loop.

The embryo engages in a complex,
exquisitely timed hormonal dialogue

that transforms the endometrium
to allow implantation.

What happens when
an embryo fails the test?

It might still manage to attach,

or even get partly
through the endometrium.

As it slowly dies, it could leave
its mother vulnerable to infection,

and all the time, it may be emitting
hormonal signals that disrupt her tissues.

The body avoids this problem
by simply removing every possible risk.

Each time ovulation doesn’t result
in a healthy pregnancy,

the womb gets rid
of its endometrial lining,

along with any unfertilized eggs,
sick, dying, or dead embryos.

That protective process
is known as menstruation,

leading to the period.

This biological trait,
bizarre as it may be,

sets us on course
for the continuation of the human race.

地球上的少数物种
都有一个看似神秘的特征

:月经周期。

我们是被选中的少数人之一。

猴子、猿、蝙蝠、人类
,可能还有象鼩

是地球上唯一会
来月经的哺乳动物。

我们也比任何其他动物都这样做,

即使它浪费营养
并且可能给身体带来不便。

那么这个
不寻常的生物过程的意义在哪里呢?

答案从怀孕开始。

在这个过程中,身体的资源
被巧妙地利用,

为胎儿塑造了一个合适的环境,

为母亲创造了一个
养育成长中的孩子的内在避风港。

在这方面,
怀孕是令人敬畏的,

但这只是故事的一半。

另一半揭示了怀孕
使母亲和她的孩子产生了矛盾。

对于所有生物来说

,人体进化是为了
促进其基因的传播。

对于母亲来说,这意味着
她应该努力

为她的所有后代提供平等的食物。

但是母亲和她的胎儿并不共享
完全相同的基因。

胎儿也从父亲那里继承了基因

,这些基因可以
通过从母亲那里提取

超过其公平份额
的资源来促进自己的生存。

这种进化上的利益冲突

将一个女人和她未出生的孩子

置于子宫内展开的生物学拉锯战中。

造成这种内部争斗的一个因素

是胎盘,胎盘是
连接母亲血液供应

并在胎儿成长过程中滋养胎儿的胎儿器官。

在大多数哺乳动物中,胎盘被限制
在母体细胞的屏障后面。

这个屏障让母亲控制
胎儿的营养供应。

但在人类和其他一些物种中

,胎盘实际上直接渗透
到母亲的循环系统

中,直接进入她的血液。

胎儿通过胎盘
向母亲的动脉泵送荷尔蒙

,使它们保持开放,以提供
营养丰富的血液的永久流动。

具有这种不受限制的进入的胎儿
可以制造激素

来增加母亲的血糖,
扩张她的动脉,

并使她的血压升高。 如果需要,

大多数哺乳动物母亲可以排出
或重新吸收胚胎,

但在人类中,一旦胎儿
与血液供应相连,

切断这种连接
就会导致出血。

如果胎儿发育不良或死亡

,母亲的健康就会受到威胁。

随着胎儿的成长,胎儿对资源的持续需求
会导致极度疲劳、

高血压

以及糖尿病和先兆子痫等疾病。

由于这些风险,

怀孕总是一项巨大的
,有时甚至是危险的投资。

因此,身体
应该仔细筛选胚胎

以找出
哪些胚胎值得挑战是有道理的。

这就是月经适合的地方。

怀孕始于一个
称为植入的过程

,胚胎将自己
嵌入子宫内膜中。

子宫内膜的进化使
植入变得困难,

因此只有健康的胚胎
才能存活。

但在这样做的过程中,

它也选择了最具
侵略性的胚胎,

形成了一个进化反馈循环。

胚胎参与复杂的、
精确定时的荷尔蒙对话

,改变子宫内膜
以允许植入。

当胚胎未通过测试时会发生什么?

它可能仍然能够附着,

甚至部分
穿过子宫内膜。

随着它慢慢死亡,它可能会
让它的母亲容易受到感染,

而且它可能一直在
释放破坏她组织的荷尔蒙信号。

身体
通过简单地消除所有可能的风险来避免这个问题。

每次排卵不能
导致健康怀孕时

,子宫就会
去除其子宫内膜,

以及任何未受精的卵子、
生病的、垂死的或死去的胚胎。

这种保护过程
被称为月经,

导致月经。

这种生物特征,
尽管可能很奇怪,但

让我们走上
了人类延续的道路。