<div><p>Background</p><p>Infectious disease incidence is often male-biased. Two main hypotheses have been proposed to explain this observation. The physiological hypothesis (PH) emphasizes differences in sex hormones and genetic architecture, while the behavioral hypothesis (BH) stresses gender-related differences in exposure. Surprisingly, the population-level predictions of these hypotheses are yet to be thoroughly tested in humans.</p><p>Methods and Findings</p><p>For ten major pathogens, we tested PH and BH predictions about incidence and exposure-prevalence patterns. Compulsory-notification records (Brazil, 2006–2009) were used to estimate age-stratified ♂:♀ incidence rate ratios for the general population and across selected sociologi...
Abstract Background Sex differences are important epidemiological factors that impact in the frequen...
Cryptococcosis, a fungal disease arising from the etiologic agent Cryptococcus neoformans, sickens a...
Multiple studies have reported a male bias in incidence and/or prevalence of malaria infection in ma...
Background: Infectious disease incidence is often male-biased. Two main hypotheses have been propose...
Infectious disease incidence is often male-biased. Two main hypotheses have been proposed to explain...
*<p>American cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL), American visceral leishmaniasis (VL), schistosomiasis (SC...
<p>Instances of significantly sex-biased incidence are highlighted in <b>bold</b> typeface; the age ...
Experimental models show a male bias in murine malaria; however, extant literature on biases in huma...
<p>Diseases: American cutaneous (<b>CL</b>) and visceral leishmaniasis (<b>VL</b>); schistosomiasis ...
International audienceEpidemiological studies and clinical observations show evidence of sexual dimo...
Multiple studies have reported a male bias in incidence and/or prevalence of malaria infection in ma...
Males and females experience differential prevalence, morbidity, and mortality in many infectious di...
Most infectious diseases are unequally distributed between male and female subjects. This sex dimorp...
Abstract Background Sex differences are important epidemiological factors that impact in the frequen...
Cryptococcosis, a fungal disease arising from the etiologic agent Cryptococcus neoformans, sickens a...
Multiple studies have reported a male bias in incidence and/or prevalence of malaria infection in ma...
Background: Infectious disease incidence is often male-biased. Two main hypotheses have been propose...
Infectious disease incidence is often male-biased. Two main hypotheses have been proposed to explain...
*<p>American cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL), American visceral leishmaniasis (VL), schistosomiasis (SC...
<p>Instances of significantly sex-biased incidence are highlighted in <b>bold</b> typeface; the age ...
Experimental models show a male bias in murine malaria; however, extant literature on biases in huma...
<p>Diseases: American cutaneous (<b>CL</b>) and visceral leishmaniasis (<b>VL</b>); schistosomiasis ...
International audienceEpidemiological studies and clinical observations show evidence of sexual dimo...
Multiple studies have reported a male bias in incidence and/or prevalence of malaria infection in ma...
Males and females experience differential prevalence, morbidity, and mortality in many infectious di...
Most infectious diseases are unequally distributed between male and female subjects. This sex dimorp...
Abstract Background Sex differences are important epidemiological factors that impact in the frequen...
Cryptococcosis, a fungal disease arising from the etiologic agent Cryptococcus neoformans, sickens a...
Multiple studies have reported a male bias in incidence and/or prevalence of malaria infection in ma...