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Nathan Goodyear

Testosterone Replacement Therapy Improves Metabolic Parameters in Hypogonadal Men with ... - 0 views

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    Testosterone therapy lowered HgbA1c in poorly controlled Diabetics.  These patients were followed out to 52 weeks.  Testosterone therapy, as is lifestyle change, a long term strategy of Diabetes control.  Studies in controlled Diabetics have not shown a reduction in HgbA1c consistently.  Total cholesterol and waist circumference were also reduced.
Nathan Goodyear

http://www.eurjmedres.com/content/pdf/s40001-014-0056-6.pdf - 0 views

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    Testosterone therapy in obese men with type II Diabetes and low T improved weight,  lipids, HgbA1c, and blood pressure.  There was more improvement with Leptin than with diet/exercise alone. What is very important is that the control group (diet, exercise, DM meds) had improvement in Testosterone levels, HgbA1c, lipids, BMI, and blood pressure; just not as strong as the treatment arm with Testosterone.
Nathan Goodyear

Fructosamine and glycated albumin for risk stratification and prediction of incident di... - 0 views

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    Fructosamine and glycated albumin shown to correlate with diabetes and associated microvascular complications.  These biomarkers would compare to HgbA1C diagnostically, but their interval of glycemic evaluation would be less i.e.2-4 weeks versus 3 months with HgbA1c.
Nathan Goodyear

ScienceDirect - Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology : Arsenic and diabetes and hyperten... - 0 views

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    long-term exposure to low levels of Arsenic associated with increased hypertension, elevated HgbA1C and many studies Diabetes.
Nathan Goodyear

Risk factors for progression of brain atrophy in aging - 0 views

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    increasing HgbA1c associated decreasing brain volume in the elderly population.  This decrease in brain volume was found in asymptomatic individuals.  Take home:  poor blood glucose control and increasing glycation of hemoglobin results in brain loss.
Nathan Goodyear

Long-term testosterone therapy in hypogonadal men ameliorates elements of the metabolic... - 0 views

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    Testosterone therapy followed over 5 years in hypogonadal men found physiologic replacement of Testosterone decreased Total cholesterol, decreased LDL, increased HDL, decreased blood pressure, decreased blood glucose, decreased HgbA1c, decreased CRP, ALT, and AST. All men with metabolic syndrome  should have appropriate hormone evaluation done.
Nathan Goodyear

Testosterone Replacement Therapy Improves Metaboli... [J Sex Med. 2013] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Testosterone therapy found to reduce HgbA1c, total cholesterol and waist circumference in men with type II diabetes.
Nathan Goodyear

Effects of calcium-vitamin D co-supplementation... [Diabetologia. 2014] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    vitamin D plus calcium in those with Diabetes and low vitamin D four to improve insulin resistance, HDL, LDL, beta cell function, and HgbA1c.  This was a short course study of 8 weeks.  Only abstract available.
Nathan Goodyear

Glycated haemoglobin and blood pressure-lowering effect of cinnamon in multi-ethnic Typ... - 0 views

  • Intake of 2g of cinnamon for 12 weeks significantly reduces the HbA1c, SBP and DBP among poorly controlled type 2 diabetes patients. Cinnamon supplementation could be considered as an additional dietary supplement option to regulate blood glucose and blood pressure levels
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    Cinnamon lowers HgbA1C over 12 weeks of treatment
Nathan Goodyear

Late-onset hypogonadism among old and middle-aged males with predia... - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Only abstract available here.  Study of Polish men found lowered Testosterone in men with pre diabetes.  The authors used the term "late onset hypogonadism" here.  An inverse association was found between calculated free Testosteorne and HgbA1c.  The authors conclusion says it all: routine screening of Testosterone in men with pre-diabetes is recommended.
Nathan Goodyear

The Evaluation of Serum Levels of Testosterone in Type 2 Diabetic Men and Its Relation ... - 0 views

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    Small study of 2 men with type II diabetes finds fasting glucose levels negatively correlate with total and free Testosterone levels, HgbA1c negatively correlated with SHBG only, total cholesterol and LDL negatively correlated with SHBG and total testosterone.  The prevalence of type II diabetes was higher with low free Testosterone than total Testosterone, but both were statistically significant.
Nathan Goodyear

Effects of Long-Term Testosterone Therapy on Patients with "Diabesity": Results of Obse... - 0 views

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    Six years of Testosterone therapy in men with obesity, low T, and type II Diabetes was found to decrease waist circumference, decrease weight, decrease fasting glucose, decrease in HgbA1c and improved systolic/diastolic blood pressure, lipids, CRP, and liver enzymes.
Nathan Goodyear

Blood Letting in High-Ferritin Type 2 Diabetes - 0 views

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    phlebotomy found to reduce HgbA1c and improve insulin sensitivity in diabetics with elevated ferritin.
Nathan Goodyear

Medical News: HbA1c More Predictive than Glucose - in Cardiovascular, Diabetes from Med... - 0 views

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    HgbA1C more predictive than fasting glucose in predicting cardiovascular disease risk in non-diabetics
Nathan Goodyear

Supplementation of Vitamin C Reduces Blood Glucose and Improves Glycosylated Hemoglobin... - 0 views

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    Oral vitamin C shown to reduce fast blood glucose, post meal blood glucose, and HgbA1C.  This study was down with metformin.  Vitamin C was used with metformin in those with type II DM.  This supports the use of vitamin C in blood sugar control.  Vitamin C does not increase blood glucose levels.
Nathan Goodyear

The worldwide epidemiology of type 2 diabetes mellitus[mdash]present and future perspec... - 0 views

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    nice article on the epidemiology of type II DM.  Included in the discussion is the point that HgbA1C is now used as the choice for diagnosis: >6.5.
Nathan Goodyear

International Journal of Impotence Research - Abstract of article: Epidemiology: testos... - 0 views

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    low Testosterone shown to be associated with insulin resistance, poor glucose control, elevated HgbA1c, and obesity
Nathan Goodyear

Testosterone and the Cardiovascular System: A Comprehensive Review of the Clinical Lite... - 0 views

  • Low endogenous bioavailable testosterone levels have been shown to be associated with higher rates of all‐cause and cardiovascular‐related mortality.39,41,46–47 Patients suffering from CAD,13–18 CHF,137 T2DM,25–26 and obesity27–28
  • have all been shown to have lower levels of endogenous testosterone compared with those in healthy controls. In addition, the severity of CAD15,17,29–30 and CHF137 correlates with the degree of testosterone deficiency
  • In patients with CHF, testosterone replacement therapy has been shown to significantly improve exercise tolerance while having no effect on LVEF
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  • testosterone therapy causes a shift in the skeletal muscle of CHF patients toward a higher concentration of type I muscle fibers
  • Testosterone replacement therapy has also been shown to improve the homeostatic model of insulin resistance and hemoglobin A1c in diabetics26,68–69 and to lower the BMI in obese patients.
  • Lower levels of endogenous testosterone have been associated with longer duration of the QTc interval
  • testosterone replacement has been shown to shorten the QTc interval
  • negative correlation has been demonstrated between endogenous testosterone levels and IMT of the carotid arteries, abdominal aorta, and thoracic aorta
  • These findings suggest that men with lower levels of endogenous testosterone may be at a higher risk of developing atherosclerosis.
  • Current guidelines from the Endocrine Society make no recommendations on whether patients with heart disease should be screened for hypogonadism and do not recommend supplementing patients with heart disease to improve survival.
  • The Massachusetts Male Aging Study also projects ≈481 000 new cases of hypogonadism annually in US men within the same age group
  • since 1993 prescriptions for testosterone, regardless of the formulation, have increased nearly 500%
  • Testosterone levels are lower in patients with chronic illnesses such as end‐stage renal disease, human immunodeficiency virus, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), obesity, and several genetic conditions such as Klinefelter syndrome
  • A growing body of evidence suggests that men with lower levels of endogenous testosterone are more prone to develop CAD during their lifetimes
  • There are 2 major potential confounding factors that the older studies generally failed to account for. These factors are the subfraction of testosterone used to perform the analysis and the method used to account for subclinical CAD.
  • The biologically inactive form of testosterone is tightly bound to SHBG and is therefore unable to bind to androgen receptors
  • The biologically inactive fraction of testosterone comprises nearly 68% of the total testosterone in human serum
  • The biologically active subfraction of testosterone, also referred to as bioavailable testosterone, is either loosely bound to albumin or circulates freely in the blood, the latter referred to as free testosterone
  • It is estimated that ≈30% of total serum testosterone is bound to albumin, whereas the remaining 1% to 3% circulates as free testosterone
  • it can be argued that using the biologically active form of testosterone to evaluate the association with CAD will produce the most reliable results
  • English et al14 found statistically significant lower levels of bioavailable testosterone, free testosterone, and free androgen index in patients with catheterization‐proven CAD compared with controls with normal coronary arteries
  • patients with catheterization‐proven CAD had statistically significant lower levels of bioavailable testosterone
  • In conclusion, existing evidence suggests that men with CAD have lower levels of endogenous testosterone,13–18 and more specifically lower levels of bioavailable testosterone
  • low testosterone levels are associated with risk factors for CAD such as T2DM25–26 and obesity
  • In a meta‐analysis of these 7 population‐based studies, Araujo et al41 showed a trend toward increased cardiovascular mortality associated with lower levels of total testosterone, but statistical significance was not achieved (RR, 1.25
  • the authors showed that a decrease of 2.1 standard deviations in levels of total testosterone was associated with a 25% increase in the risk of cardiovascular mortality
  • the relative risk of all‐cause mortality in men with lower levels of total testosterone was calculated to be 1.35
  • higher risk of cardiovascular mortality is associated with lower levels of bioavailable testosterone
  • Existing evidence seems to suggest that lower levels of endogenous testosterone are associated with higher rates of all‐cause mortality and cardiovascular mortality
  • studies have shown that lower levels of endogenous bioavailable testosterone are associated with higher rates of all‐cause and cardiovascular mortality
  • It may be possible that using bioavailable testosterone to perform mortality analysis will yield more accurate results because it prevents the biologically inactive subfraction of testosterone from playing a potential confounding role in the analysis
  • The earliest published material on this matter dates to the late 1930s
  • the concept that testosterone replacement therapy improves angina has yet to be proven wrong
  • In more recent studies, 3 randomized, placebo‐controlled trials demonstrated that administration of testosterone improves myocardial ischemia in men with CAD
  • The improvement in myocardial ischemia was shown to occur in response to both acute and chronic testosterone therapy and seemed to be independent of whether an intravenous or transdermal formulation of testosterone was used.
  • testosterone had no effect on endothelial nitric oxide activity
  • There is growing evidence from in vivo animal models and in vitro models that testosterone induces coronary vasodilation by modulating the activity of ion channels, such as potassium and calcium channels, on the surface of vascular smooth muscle cells
  • Experimental studies suggest that the most likely mechanism of action for testosterone on vascular smooth muscle cells is via modulation of action of non‐ATP‐sensitive potassium ion channels, calcium‐activated potassium ion channels, voltage‐sensitive potassium ion channels, and finally L‐type calcium ion channels
  • Corona et al confirmed those results by demonstrating that not only total testosterone levels are lower among diabetics, but also the levels of free testosterone and SHBG are lower in diabetic patients
  • Laaksonen et al65 followed 702 Finnish men for 11 years and demonstrated that men in the lowest quartile of total testosterone, free testosterone, and SHBG were more likely to develop T2DM and metabolic syndrome.
  • Vikan et al followed 1454 Swedish men for 11 years and discovered that men in the highest quartile of total testosterone were significantly less likely to develop T2DM
  • authors demonstrated a statistically significant increase in the incidence of T2DM in subjects receiving gonadotropin‐releasing hormone antagonist therapy. In addition, a significant increase in the rate of myocardial infarction, stroke, sudden cardiac death, and development of cardiovascular disease was noted in patients receiving antiandrogen therapy.67
  • Several authors have demonstrated that the administration of testosterone in diabetic men improves the homeostatic model of insulin resistance, hemoglobin A1c, and fasting plasma glucose
  • Existing evidence strongly suggests that the levels of total and free testosterone are lower among diabetic patients compared with those in nondiabetics
  • insulin seems to be acting as a stimulant for the hypothalamus to secret gonadotropin‐releasing hormone, which consequently results in increased testosterone production. It can be argued that decreased stimulation of the hypothalamus in diabetics secondary to insulin deficiency could result in hypogonadotropic hypogonadism
  • BMI has been shown to be inversely associated with testosterone levels
  • This interaction may be a result of the promotion of lipolysis in abdominal adipose tissue by testosterone, which may in turn cause reduced abdominal adiposity. On the other hand, given that adipose tissue has a higher concentration of the enzyme aromatase, it could be that increased adipose tissue results in more testosterone being converted to estrogen, thereby causing hypogonadism. Third, increased abdominal obesity may cause reduced testosterone secretion by negatively affecting the hypothalamus‐pituitary‐testicular axis. Finally, testosterone may be the key factor in activating the enzyme 11‐hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase in adipose tissue, which transforms glucocorticoids into their inactive form.
  • increasing age may alter the association between testosterone and CRP. Another possible explanation for the association between testosterone level and CRP is central obesity and waist circumference
  • Bai et al have provided convincing evidence that testosterone might be able to shorten the QTc interval by augmenting the activity of slowly activating delayed rectifier potassium channels while simultaneously slowing the activity of L‐type calcium channels
  • consistent evidence that supplemental testosterone shortens the QTc interval.
  • Intima‐media thickness (IMT) of the carotid artery is considered a marker for preclinical atherosclerosis
  • Studies have shown that levels of endogenous testosterone are inversely associated with IMT of the carotid artery,126–128,32,129–130 as well as both the thoracic134 and the abdominal aorta
  • 1 study has demonstrated that lower levels of free testosterone are associated with accelerated progression of carotid artery IMT
  • another study has reported that decreased levels of total and bioavailable testosterone are associated with progression of atherosclerosis in the abdominal aorta
  • These findings suggest that normal physiologic testosterone levels may help to protect men from the development of atherosclerosis
  • Czesla et al successfully demonstrated that the muscle specimens that were exposed to metenolone had a significant shift in their composition toward type I muscle fibers
  • Type I muscle fibers, also known as slow‐twitch or oxidative fibers, are associated with enhanced strength and physical capability
  • It has been shown that those with advanced CHF have a higher percentage of type II muscle fibers, based on muscle biopsy
  • Studies have shown that men with CHF suffer from reduced levels of total and free testosterone.137 It has also been shown that reduced testosterone levels in men with CHF portends a poor prognosis and is associated with increased CHF mortality.138 Reduced testosterone has also been shown to correlate negatively with exercise capacity in CHF patients.
  • Testosterone replacement therapy has been shown to significantly improve exercise capacity, without affecting LVEF
  • the results of the 3 meta‐analyses seem to indicate that testosterone replacement therapy does not cause an increase in the rate of adverse cardiovascular events
  • Data from 3 meta‐analyses seem to contradict the commonly held belief that testosterone administration may increase the risk of developing prostate cancer
  • One meta‐analysis reported an increase in all prostate‐related adverse events with testosterone administration.146 However, when each prostate‐related event, including prostate cancer and a rise in PSA, was analyzed separately, no differences were observed between the testosterone group and the placebo group
  • the existing data from the 3 meta‐analyses seem to indicate that testosterone replacement therapy does not increase the risk of adverse cardiovascular events
  • the authors correctly point out the weaknesses of their study which include retrospective study design and lack of randomization, small sample size at extremes of follow‐up, lack of outcome validation by chart review and poor generalizability of the results given that only male veterans with CAD were included in this study
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      The authors here present Total Testosterone as a "confounding" value
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      This would be HSD-II
  • the studies that failed to find an association between testosterone and CRP used an older population group
  • low testosterone may influence the severity of CAD by adversely affecting the mediators of the inflammatory response such as high‐sensitivity C‐reactive protein, interleukin‐6, and tumor necrosis factor–α
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    Good review of Testosterone and CHD.  Low T is associated with increased all cause mortality and cardiovascular mortality, CAD, CHF, type II diabetes, obesity, increased IMT,  increased severity of CAD and CHF.  Testosterone replacement in men with low T has been shown to improve exercise tolerance in CHF, improve insulin resistance, improve HgbA1c and lower BMI in the obese.
Nathan Goodyear

Long-Term Testosterone Treatment in Elderly Men wi... [J Sex Med. 2014] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Testosterone therapy, undecanoate in this study, found to improve body weight, decrease waist circumference, BMI, lower Total Cholesterol, lower triglycerides, decrease fasting glucose, decrease HgbA1c, decrease blood pressure and increase HDL in men >59.  
Nathan Goodyear

Cardiovascular Diabetology | Full text | Improvement of the diabetic foot upon testoste... - 0 views

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    Case report of 3 cases finds improvement in diabetic foot complications, including neuropathy, in men treated with Testosterone.  This makes sense as the Testosterone will improve insulin function, improve HgbA1c and reduce inflammation in these men.
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