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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The metabolic clearance rate and origin of plasma dihydrotestosterone in man and its conversion to the 5-alpha-androstanediols.

J A Mahoudeau, +2 more
- 01 Jun 1971 - 
- Vol. 50, Iss: 6, pp 1338-1344
TLDR
It was determined that a major fraction of plasma dihydrotestosterone was derived from these plasma precursors rather than from glandular secretion.
Abstract
Dihydrotestosterone metabolism was studied with a constant infusion technique in three men, three women, five hirsute women, and four estrogen-treated hirsute women. The mean dihydrotestosterone metabolic clearance rate was higher in men (336 liters/24 hr per m(2) [range, 239-448]) than in women (153 liters/24 hr per m(2) [range, 108-184]). The metabolic clearance rates in hirsute patients were intermediate between those men and women and were decreased by estrogen treatment. These observations demonstrate similarities in the metabolic rates of testosterone and dihydrotestosterone. The conversion of plasma testosterone and androstenedione to dihydrotestosterone was studied in men and hirsute women. Approximately 4 and 2% of plasma testosterone and androstenedione, respectively, were converted to plasma dihydrotestosterone in both groups. From these observations it was determined that a major fraction of plasma dihydrotestosterone was derived from these plasma precursors rather than from glandular secretion. Both 5alpha-androstan-3alpha,17beta-diol (3alpha-diol) and 5alpha-androstan-3beta,17beta-diol (3beta-diol) were identified in plasma during dihydrotestosterone and testosterone infusions. The conversion ratio of dihydrotestosterone to 3alpha-diol (C(BB) (DHT-3alpha)) was greater than the conversion ratio to the 3beta-isomer (C(BB) (DTH-3beta)) in all the patients studied. Both C(BB) (DHT-3alpha) and C(BB) (DHT-3beta) were higher in men (mean values of 0.151 [range, 0.110-0.222] and 0..031 [range, 0.022-0.042]) than in women (means of 0.044 [range, 0.037-0.048] and 0.012 [range 0.010-0.013]). A smaller fraction of testosterone was converted to 3alpha-diol and 3beta-diol.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Steroid 5α-Reductase Deficiency in Man: An Inherited Form of Male Pseudohermaphroditism

TL;DR: In male pseudohermaphrodites born with ambiguity of the external genitalia but with marked virilization at puberty, biochemical evaluation reveals a marked decrease in plasma dihydrotestosterone secondary to a decrease in steroid 5α-reductase activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex-hormone-binding globulin.

TL;DR: By developing SHBG concentration measurement methods-responses of hirsutism to glucocorticoid or estrogem may be assessed, and the effect of thyroid hormones on SHBG may also have therapeutic implications in endocrine disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review article: the polycystic ovary syndrome

TL;DR: Current evidence regarding the basis for the dysfunction of ovarian steroidogenesis and follicular maturation, and the aberration of gonadotropin secretion as related to the inappropriate steroid feedback system will be reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Male pseudohermaphroditism due to steroid 5α-reductase deficiency

TL;DR: The data support the thesis that the defect in these male pseudohermaphrodites is secondary to decreased steroid Δ 4 -5α-reductase activity and demonstrates an inherited disorder of steroid metabolism in which the basic enzyme deficiency resides in the target tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of hyperinsulinemia in the pathogenesis of ovarian hyperandrogenism

TL;DR: The evidence that supports the hypothesis that insulin and LH both regulate ovarian androgen production was presented and in vitro evidence suggests that hyperinsulinemia may play a central role in the development of ovarian hyperandrogenism.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The conversion of testosterone to 5-alpha-androstan-17-beta-ol-3-one by rat prostate in vivo and in vitro.

TL;DR: It has been shown that in the presence of a NADPH2-generating system prostatic nuclei convert testosterone to dihydrotestosterone, whereas prostatic cytoplasm reduces dihydotestosterone to androstandiol.
Journal ArticleDOI

Capacity of the Testosterone-Binding Globulin in Human Plasma and Influence of Specific Binding of Testosterone on Its Metabolic Clearance Rate

TL;DR: The binding capacity (TeBC) and binding index (BI) of the testosterone binding globulin (TeBG) have been studied in several groups of patients as discussed by the authors, including male hypogonadism in hyperthyroidism, and in males with chronic asthmatic bronchitis or cirrhosis of the liver.
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.
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