scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Reproductive Hormones in Aging Men. I. Measurement of Sex Steroids, Basal Luteinizing Hormone, and Leydig Cell Response to Human Chorionic Gonadotropin

TLDR
It is suggested that factors other than aging might have influenceed the data previously reported, and that aging per se need not be associated with altered sex steroid levels in the human male.
Abstract
Although alterations of circulating sex steroids have been reported in aging men, it is not known to what extent reported changes may represent effects of variables other than aging. We have measured sex hormone levels, serum binding, the testosterone (T) response to hCG, and basal LH levels in 69 male volunteers, aged 25–89 yr, without alcoholism, obesity, chronic illness, or severe prostatic disease, and not using potentially interfering medications. In our study there was no effect of age on serum T, 5αdihydrotestosterone, estrone, or estradiol. Binding of T to Tbinding globulin increased slightly with age, but not enough to decrease the free T index (fraction free × T concentration). Basal serum LH rose significantly. The T response to hCG suggested a somewhat diminished Leydig cell reserve with age, a conclusion consistent with the LH elevation. Our failure to detect the decreased T and free T index or increased estrogens reported by others could reflect afternoon rather than morning sampling, but is...

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Longitudinal Effects of Aging on Serum Total and Free Testosterone Levels in Healthy Men

TL;DR: Observations of health factor independent, age-related longitudinal decreases in T and free T, resulting in a high frequency of hypogonadal values, suggest that further investigation of T replacement in aged men, perhaps targeted to those with the lowest serum T concentrations, are justified.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Unitary Model for Involutional Osteoporosis: Estrogen Deficiency Causes Both Type I and Type II Osteoporosis in Postmenopausal Women and Contributes to Bone Loss in Aging Men

TL;DR: A new unitary model for the pathophysiology of involutional osteoporosis is proposed that identifies estrogen (E) deficiency as the cause of both the early, accelerated and the late, slow phases of bone loss in postmenopausal women and as a contributing cause of the continuous phase ofBone loss in aging men.
Journal ArticleDOI

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship of serum sex steroid levels and bone turnover markers with bone mineral density in men and women: A key role for bioavailable estrogen

TL;DR: It is shown that age-related bone loss may be the result of E deficiency not just in postmenopausal women, but also in men, and bioavailable E levels decline significantly with age and are important predictors of BMD in men as well as women.
References
More filters
Book

Statistical Principles in Experimental Design

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce the principles of estimation and inference: means and variance, means and variations, and means and variance of estimators and inferors, and the analysis of factorial experiments having repeated measures on the same element.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Principles in Experimental Design

TL;DR: This chapter discusses design and analysis of single-Factor Experiments: Completely Randomized Design and Factorial Experiments in which Some of the Interactions are Confounded.
Journal ArticleDOI

Testosterone secretion and metabolism in male senescence

TL;DR: It was observed that plasma testosterone levels and the apparent free plasma testosterone concentration remain within the same range from adolescence until the age of 50 yr, but that from the 6th decade on, the mean plasma levels decrease rather rapidly, with a wide range of individual values.
Journal ArticleDOI

Radioimmunoassay for Luteinizing Hormone in Human plasma Or Serum: Physiological Studies*

TL;DR: Levels were remarkably constant in men from day to day and in women except at midcycle, when a sharp peak occurred lasting less than 24 hours, and mean plasma LH levels during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle were higher than mean values obtained during the luteal phase.
Related Papers (5)