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Serum dihydrotestosterone and testosterone concentrations in human immunodeficiency virus-infected men with and without weight loss.

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TLDR
DHT levels are lower in HIV-infected men than in healthy men but that neither DHT levels nor DHT-to-testosterone ratios correlate with weight loss, and the hypothesis that a defect in DHT generation contributes to weight loss independently of changes in testosterone levels is not supported.
Abstract
Weight loss is an important determinant of disease outcome in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected men. Others have suggested that a defect in dihydrotestosterone (DHT) generation contributes to weight loss in HIV-infected men. To determine whether DHT levels correlate with weight loss independently of changes in testosterone levels, we prospectively measured serum total- and free-testosterone and DHT levels in 148 consecutive HIV-infected men and 42 healthy men. Thirty-one percent of HIV-infected men had serum testosterone levels less than 275 ng/dL, the lower limit of the normal male range; of these, 81% had normal or low LH and FSH levels (hypogonadotropic), and 19% had elevated LH and FSH levels (hypergonadotropic). Overall, serum testosterone, free-testosterone, and DHT levels were lower in HIV-infected men than in healthy men, but serum DHT-to-testosterone ratios were not significantly different between the two groups. Serum total- and free-testosterone levels were lower in HIV-infected men who had lost 5 lb or more of weight in the preceding 12 months than in those who had not lost any weight. Serum DHT levels and DHT-to-testosterone ratios did not differ between those who had lost weight and those who had not. Serum testosterone and free-testosterone levels, but not DHT levels, correlated with weight change and with Karnofsky performance status. We also performed a retrospective analysis of data from a previous study in which HIV-infected men with serum testosterone levels less than 400 ng/dL had been treated with placebo or testosterone patches designed to nominally release 5 mg testosterone over 24 hours. Serum testosterone-to-DHT ratios did not change after testosterone treatment. Changes in fat-free mass were correlated with changes in both serum testosterone (r = 0.42, P = 0.018) and DHT (r = 0.35, P = 0.049) levels. Serum total- testosterone and DHT levels were highly correlated with one another, and when the change in serum testosterone was taken into account, serum DHT levels no longer showed a significant correlation with change in fat-free mass. We conclude that DHT levels are lower in HIV-infected men than in healthy men but that neither DHT levels nor DHT-to-testosterone ratios correlate with weight loss. During testosterone treatment, serum DHT levels increase proportionately, but the increments in serum testosterone correlate with the change in fat-free mass. Our data do not support the hypothesis that a defect in DHT generation contributes to weight loss in HIV-infected men independently of changes in testosterone levels; it is possible that such a defect might exist in HIV-infected men with more severe weight loss.

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Testosterone therapy in men with androgen deficiency syndromes: an Endocrine Society clinical practice guideline.

TL;DR: The guidelines for the evaluation and treatment of androgen deficiency syndromes in adult men published previously in 2006 were updated by the Task Force of the Clinical Guidelines Subcommittee of The Endocrine Society.
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Testosterone Therapy in Adult Men with Androgen Deficiency Syndromes: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline

TL;DR: The Task Force recommends testosterone therapy for symptomatic men with androgen deficiency, who have low testosterone levels, to induce and maintain secondary sex characteristics and to improve their sexual function, sense of well-being, muscle mass and strength, and bone mineral density.
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Testosterone Therapy in Men With Hypogonadism: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline

TL;DR: It is suggested that when clinicians institute T therapy, they aim at achieving T concentrations in the mid-normal range during treatment with any of the approved formulations, taking into consideration patient preference, pharmacokinetics, formulation-specific adverse effects, treatment burden, and cost.
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Testosterone Replacement and Resistance Exercise in HIV-infected Men with Weight Loss and Low Testosterone Levels

TL;DR: It is suggested that testosterone and resistance exercise promote gains in body weight, muscle mass, muscle strength, and lean body mass in HIV-infected men with weight loss and low testosterone levels.
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Drug insight: Testosterone and selective androgen receptor modulators as anabolic therapies for chronic illness and aging.

TL;DR: Meta-analyses indicate that testosterone supplementation increases fat-free mass and muscle strength in HIV-positive men with weight loss, glucocorticoid-treated men, and older men with low or low-normal testosterone levels, and selective androgen-receptor modulators that are preferentially anabolic hold promise as anabolic therapies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Those given testosterone had greater increases than those given placebo in muscle size in their arms and the strength of the arms and legs was assessed by bench-press and squatting exercises, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The structure of the determinants of apoptosis, a type of cell death, and the role that individual cells play in this process are studied.
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Magnitude of body-cell-mass depletion and the timing of death from wasting in AIDS.

TL;DR: It is concluded that death from wasting in AIDS is related to the magnitude of tissue depletion and is independent of the underlying cause of wasting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increase in bone density and lean body mass during testosterone administration in men with acquired hypogonadism

TL;DR: It is concluded that testosterone therapy given to adult men with acquired hypogonadism decreases sc fat and increases lean muscle mass and testosterone therapy reduces bone remodeling and increases trabecular bone density.
Journal ArticleDOI

Testosterone Replacement Increases Fat-Free Mass and Muscle Size in Hypogonadal Men

TL;DR: Replacement doses of testosterone increase fat-free mass and muscle size and strength in hypogonadal men in the setting of controlled nutritional intake and exercise level and whether androgen replacement in wasting states characterized by low testosterone levels will have similar anabolic effects remains to be studied.
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