V
Varant Kupelian
Researcher at Royal Adelaide Hospital
Publications - 65
Citations - 5202
Varant Kupelian is an academic researcher from Royal Adelaide Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Lower urinary tract symptoms. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 61 publications receiving 4814 citations. Previous affiliations of Varant Kupelian include Boston Medical Center & Case Western Reserve University.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Prevalence of Symptomatic Androgen Deficiency in Men
Andre B. Araujo,Gretchen R. Esche,Varant Kupelian,Amy B. O’Donnell,Thomas G. Travison,Rachel E. Williams,Richard V. Clark,John B. McKinlay +7 more
TL;DR: Prevalence of symptomatic androgen deficiency in men 30 and 79 yr of age is 5.6% and increases substantially with age, projection of these estimates to the year 2025 suggests that there will be as many as 6.5 million American men ages 30-79 yr with symptomaticandrogen deficiency, an increase of 38% from 2000 population estimates.
Journal ArticleDOI
Low sex hormone-binding globulin, total testosterone, and symptomatic androgen deficiency are associated with development of the metabolic syndrome in nonobese men.
Varant Kupelian,Stephanie T. Page,Andre B. Araujo,Thomas G. Travison,William J. Bremner,John B. McKinlay +5 more
TL;DR: Low serum SHBG, low total testosterone, and clinical AD are associated with increased risk of developing MetS over time, particularly in nonoverweight, middle-aged men (BMI, <25).
Journal ArticleDOI
The Relative Contributions of Aging, Health, and Lifestyle Factors to Serum Testosterone Decline in Men
TL;DR: Both chronological aging and changes in health and lifestyle factors are associated with declines in serum T, and the possibility that age-related hormone decline may be decelerated through the management of health andifestyle factors is suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prevalence of lower urinary tract symptoms and effect on quality of life in a racially and ethnically diverse random sample: the Boston Area Community Health (BACH) Survey
Varant Kupelian,John T. Wei,Michael P. O'Leary,John W. Kusek,Heather J. Litman,Carol L. Link,John B. McKinlay +6 more
TL;DR: In this population-based, racially and ethnically diverse random sample, LUTS were common among both men and women and increased substantially with age and had a negative impact on quality of life across age, sex, and race/ethnic groups.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Population-Level Decline in Serum Testosterone Levels in American Men
TL;DR: Recent years have seen a substantial, and as yet unrecognized, age-independent population-level decrease in T in American men, potentially attributable to birth cohort differences or to health or environmental effects not captured in observed data.