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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.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of Symptomatic Androgen Deficiency in Men

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.
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Low sex hormone-binding globulin, total testosterone, and symptomatic androgen deficiency are associated with development of the metabolic syndrome in nonobese men.

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).
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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.
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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

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.
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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.