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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

3 alpha, 17 beta-androstanediol glucuronide in plasma. A marker of androgen action in idiopathic hirsutism.

Richard Horton, +2 more
- 01 May 1982 - 
- Vol. 69, Iss: 5, pp 1203-1206
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TLDR
For example, the authors found that 3 alpha-diol glucuronide is a marker of peripheral androgen action and markedly elevated in women with idiopathic hirsutism.
Abstract
Biologically active androgens and peripheral androgen metabolites in plasma were measured in 25 women with idiopathic hirsutism (IH). Plasma testosterone was not significantly elevated. Free testosterone however was increased although the elevation was not impressive (10.9 +/- 6.6 SD vs. 3.3 +/- 1.5 ng/dl) and one-fourth of the cases had normal unbound testosterone. Dihydrotestosterone (DHT) values were elevated (23.5 +/- 14 vs. 12.5 +/- 3.59) but again over half of the values were within the normal range. In our series of mild to moderate cases, 3 alpha-diol was not at all discriminatory. However, plasma 3 alpha-diol glucuronide was markedly increased (604 +/- 376 vs. 40 +/- 10 ng/dl), and elevated in all but one mild case. Previous studies document that DHT is the important androgen in skin and formation of DHT and 3 alpha-diol is markedly increased in vitro in IH. Since 3 alpha-diol glucuronide is derived largely from extrasplanchnic events, beta-glucuronidase is present in skin, and androgen stimulates formation of the enzyme in extrasplanchnic tissue, we conclude that 3 alpha-diol glucuronide is a marker of peripheral androgen action and markedly elevated in IH.

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Age, disease, and changing sex hormone levels in middle-aged men: results of the Massachusetts Male Aging Study.

TL;DR: Subgroup analyses suggested that obese subjects might be responsible for much of the group difference in androgen level, and serum concentrations of estrogens and cortisol did not change significantly with age or differ between groups.
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The decline of androgen levels in elderly men and its clinical and therapeutic implications.

TL;DR: Until the long-term risk-benefit ratio for androgen administration to elderly is established in adequately powered trials of longer duration, androgen administrations to elderly men should be reserved for the minority of elderly men who have both clear clinical symptoms of hypogonadism and frankly low serum testosterone levels.
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Prospective Study of Sex Hormone Levels and Risk of Prostate Cancer

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The role of steroid hormones in prostate carcinogenesis.

TL;DR: In this paper, the epidemiologic evidence for a role of steroid hormonal factors in prostate carcinogenesis is summarized first, followed by review of experimental data, a discussion of the possible mechanisms whereby steroid hormones, androgens as well as estrogens, may be involved in prostate cancer causation, and overall conclusions and suggestions for future research.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Testosterone: a major determinant of extragenital sexual dimorphism

TL;DR: Testosterone rather than 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone appears to be the major intracellular androgen in organs other than skin and reproductive tract, but other steroid metabolites and their receptors are required to produce the diverse tissue differences observed in males and females.
Journal ArticleDOI

Testosterone and Androstenedione Blood Production Rates in Normal Women and Women with Idiopathic Hirsutism or Polycystic Ovaries

TL;DR: 74% of the plasma testosterone in these subjects must have been either secreted or derived from a precursor that did not enter the plasma androstenedione pool, suggesting that testosterone metabolic clearance rates vary directly with some function of testosterone production.
Book ChapterDOI

Steroid dynamics under steady-state conditions.

TL;DR: Future considerations in steady-state steroid research include development of experimental methods for obtaining knowledge of concentrations and production rates of steroids near target sites and reevaluation of values for secretion rates of interconverting steroids obtained from specific activities of urinary metabolites which have been found to be inaccurate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differential Rates of Conversion of Testerone to Dihydrotestosterone In Acne and in Normal Human Skin- a Possible Pathogenic Factor in Acne

TL;DR: It appears that the previously postulated end organ sensitivity, thought to account in, part for the occurrence and distribution of acne, may indeed exist and may be mediated by differential rats of conversion of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone in the skin.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparative study of the conversion of testosterone to 17-beta-hydroxy-5-alpha-androstan-3-one (Dihydrotestosterone) by prostate and epididymis.

TL;DR: Dihydrotestosterone formation was measurable in all of the immature prostates studied, including that from calf, and in a variety of other tissues known to be under androgenic control—duck preen gland, the comb and wattle of the chicken, and the preputial gland of rat and mouse.
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