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Showing posts with label aging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aging. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Effect of Age, Body Weight and Smoking on Testosterone in Men



 This study showed that 

 1- Men with higher Body Mass Index (a measure of weight that takes into account height, calculate yours here: http://1.usa.gov/XBIO5K ) had lower testosterone as they aged compared to thinner men. In fact, "a change in BMI from nonobese to obese may be equivalent to a 15 yr fall in T" Note: BMI is a very rough measure that does not take into account muscle or fat mass.  A muscular man with little body fat may have high BMI (in my case, my BMI is 30). A better study would measure fat mass, but that tends to be cumbersome and expensive.

 2- Smoking did not affect testosterone, but it made the pituitary gland send a higher LH signal to testicles, which could be caused by progressive testicular dysfunction. 

 3- Not surprisingly, sex hormone binding globulin increased with age. SHBG binds to testosterone and renders it ineffective. Higher insulin levels and lower IGF-1 levels caused by aging may account for this increase in SHBG.

4- Aging causes primary testicular dysfunction with maintained total T and progressively blunted free T associated with higher LH. This interpretation is supported by the age-related attrition of the testicular Leydig cell population  and other factors involved with testicular function

Reference: http://jcem.endojournals.org/content/93/7/2737.long

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators- Future Agents for Aging Related Muscle Loss

Oral selective androgen receptor modulators (SARMs) are investigational agents. Studied since 1998, they are still very much in the infancy of their development and marketing. SARMs may be able to provide the benefits of increased muscle mass and bone density, and fat loss that testosterone and other traditional anabolic/androgenicsteroids provide but without the unwanted side effects (prostatic enlargement). SARMs are not intended to be a form of testosterone replacement therapy. So, why am I talking about them?


More information:
Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Doctors Seek Way to Treat Muscle Loss

Doctors Seek Way to Treat Muscle Loss



Testosterone can do this easily, as long as doctors have a very close monitoring on hematocrit since older men tend to have more problems with polycythemia
 

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