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Nathan Goodyear

Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome | Full text | Visceral adiposity, insulin resistance a... - 0 views

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    adipose tissue and it's biological activity contribution to cancer risk.  Good review of our current understanding on how adipose tissue increases the favorably of cancer.
Nathan Goodyear

Upregulation of estrogen and androgen receptors modulate expression of FGF-2 and FGF-7 ... - 0 views

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    difficult, technical read...but take home is that ER alpha expression is increased in the male prostrate stromal cells in response to elevated estradiol levels.  Remember, that ER alpha promotes inflammation and growth.  Thus, in part, this helps to explain BPH.
Nathan Goodyear

Testosterone and Weight Loss - the Evidence - Nebido - Testosterone Undecanoate - 0 views

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    great review on Testosterone physiology and obesity.
Nathan Goodyear

The Role of Androgen in the Adipose Tissue of Males - 0 views

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    great review of the current knowledge of how adipose tissue influences androgen production and how androgens influence adipose tissue.  For example, leptin has an androgen inhibition centrally and peripherally.
Nathan Goodyear

Relation between markers of inflammation and e... [Med Sci Monit. 2010] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Estradiol found to be associated with elevated CRP and fibrinogen with men.  This association was not found between Testosterone and the same inflammatory markers.  This points to the conversion of Testosterone to estrogen as a contributor to inflammation and CVD in men.
Nathan Goodyear

Estradiol and Inflammatory Markers in Older Men - 0 views

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    Estradiol found to be associate, though weakly, with IL-6 in men.  This provides a link between estradiol production in men and inflammation.
Nathan Goodyear

Estradiol in elderly men. [Aging Male. 2002] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  • Plasma levels of estradiol do not necessarily reflect tissue-level activity
  • age-associated increased aromatization of testosterone
  • Estradiol levels are highly significantly positively related to body fat mass and more specifically to subcutaneous abdominal fat
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    Review of the sources of estrogens in men and the impact it has on a man's physiology.
Nathan Goodyear

Abnormal levels of serum dehydroepiandrosterone, estrone, and estradiol in men with rhe... - 0 views

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    elevated estradiol associated with increased inflammation symptoms in men with RA. Not found with estrone.
Nathan Goodyear

Biological functions and clinical implications of oestrogen receptors alfa and beta in ... - 0 views

  • ERα-positive cells respond to E2 with increased proliferation
  • ERβ was artificially introduced into these cells, E2-induced proliferation was inhibited
  • The proliferative response to E2 seems to be determined by the ratio of ERα/ERβ. The functions of ERβ in the breast are probably related to its antiproliferative as well as its prodifferentiative functions
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  • The risk of developing PC seems to be related to the diet
  • In the human prostate, ERβ is expressed in the basal epithelial cells and AR in the luminal epithelium.
  • For many years, DHT was considered to be the main hormone guiding prostate development and function. However, the idea was challenged when in 2001 Mahendroo et al. showed that mice in which both forms of 5α-reductase had been inactivated, have a normal functional prostate [50]. The question was then raised as to what is the real function of DHT in the prostate. In 1989 we hypothesized that DHT is a precursor of an oestrogen, 5α-androstane-3β,17β-diol (3β-Adiol) and that physiological levels of an oestrogen could be produced in the total absence of aromatase [51]. We later demonstrated that 3β-Adiol is abundant in the prostate and is a good natural ligand for ERβ
  • The overall effect of oestrogens in the immune system is determined by a balance between ERα and ERβ signalling
  • The hypothesis of our group is that ERβ plays an important role in regulating the differentiation of pluripotent haematopoietic progenitor cells whereas ERα induces proliferation
  • In tissues and cell lines of mammary epithelium for example, it has been noticed that E2 in the presence of ERα elicits proliferation, but in the presence of ERβ it inhibits proliferation
  • ERα and ERβ have distinctive tissue distributions and to the great surprise of endocrinologists [7] many tissues previously thought to be ‘oestrogen-insensitive tissues’ were found to be ERβ positive and oestrogen sensitive. The most notable of the ERα-negative ERβ-abundant tissues were the epithelium of the rodent ventral prostate [8], the granulosa cells of the ovaries [9] and the parenchyma of the lungs
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    Awesome article discusses the different balance of ER alpha and ER beta and the effects on tissue as it relates to proliferation versus differentiation.  This has clear implications in disease.  Physicians prescribing hormones without a knowledge and understanding of this are only causing potential harm to their clients.
Nathan Goodyear

Testosterone and glucose metabolism in men: current concepts and controversies - 0 views

  • Around 50% of ageing, obese men presenting to the diabetes clinic have lowered testosterone levels relative to reference ranges based on healthy young men
  • The absence of high-level evidence in this area is illustrated by the Endocrine Society testosterone therapy in men with androgen deficiency clinical practice guidelines (Bhasin et al. 2010), which are appropriate for, but not specific to men with metabolic disorders. All 32 recommendations made in these guidelines are based on either very low or low quality evidence.
  • A key concept relates to making a distinction between replacement and pharmacological testosterone therapy
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  • The presence of symptoms was more closely linked to increasing age than to testosterone levels
  • Findings similar to type 2 diabetes were reported for men with the metabolic syndrome, which were associated with reductions in total testosterone of −2.2 nmol/l (95% CI −2.41 to 1.94) and in free testosterone
  • low testosterone is more predictive of the metabolic syndrome in lean men
  • Cross-sectional studies uniformly show that 30–50% of men with type 2 diabetes have lowered circulating testosterone levels, relative to references based on healthy young men
  • In a recent cross-sectional study of 240 middle-aged men (mean age 54 years) with either type 2 diabetes, type 1 diabetes or without diabetes (Ng Tang Fui et al. 2013b), increasing BMI and age were dominant drivers of low total and free testosterone respectively.
  • both diabetes and the metabolic syndrome are associated with a modest reduction in testosterone, in magnitude comparable with the effect of 10 years of ageing
  • In a cross-sectional study of 490 men with type 2 diabetes, there was a strong independent association of low testosterone with anaemia
  • In men, low testosterone is a marker of poor health, and may improve our ability to predict risk
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      probably the most important point made in this article
  • low testosterone identifies men with an adverse metabolic phenotype
  • Diabetic men with low testosterone are significantly more likely to be obese or insulin resistant
  • increased inflammation, evidenced by higher CRP levels
  • Bioavailable but not free testosterone was independently predictive of mortality
  • It remains possible that low testosterone is a consequence of insulin resistance, or simply a biomarker, co-existing because of in-common risk factors.
  • In prospective studies, reviewed in detail elsewhere (Grossmann et al. 2010) the inverse association of low testosterone with metabolic syndrome or diabetes is less consistent for free testosterone compared with total testosterone
  • In a study from the Framingham cohort, SHBG but not testosterone was prospectively and independently associated with incident metabolic syndrome
  • low SHBG (Ding et al. 2009) but not testosterone (Haring et al. 2013) with an increased risk of future diabetes
  • In cross-sectional studies of men with (Grossmann et al. 2008) and without (Bonnet et al. 2013) diabetes, SHBG but not testosterone was inversely associated with worse glycaemic control
  • SHBG may have biological actions beyond serving as a carrier protein for and regulator of circulating sex steroids
  • In men with diabetes, free testosterone, if measured by gold standard equilibrium dialysis (Dhindsa et al. 2004), is reduced
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      expensive, laborious process filled with variables
  • Low free testosterone remains inversely associated with insulin resistance, independent of SHBG (Grossmann et al. 2008). This suggests that the low testosterone–dysglycaemia association is not solely a consequence of low SHBG.
  • Experimental evidence reviewed below suggests that visceral adipose tissue is an important intermediate (rather than a confounder) in the inverse association of testosterone with insulin resistance and metabolic disorders.
  • testosterone promotes the commitment of pluripotent stem cells into the myogenic lineage and inhibits their differentiation into adipocytes
  • testosterone regulates the metabolic functions of mature adipocytes (Xu et al. 1991, Marin et al. 1995) and myocytes (Pitteloud et al. 2005) in ways that reduce insulin resistance.
  • Pre-clinical evidence (reviewed in Rao et al. (2013)) suggests that at the cellular level, testosterone may improve glucose metabolism by modulating the expression of the glucose-transported Glut4 and the insulin receptor, as well as by regulating key enzymes involved in glycolysis.
  • More recently testosterone has been shown to protect murine pancreatic β cells against glucotoxicity-induced apoptosis
  • Interestingly, a reciprocal feedback also appears to exist, given that not only chronic (Cameron et al. 1990, Allan 2013) but also, as shown more recently (Iranmanesh et al. 2012, Caronia et al. 2013), acute hyperglycaemia can lower testosterone levels.
  • There is also evidence that testosterone regulates insulin sensitivity directly and acutely
  • In men with prostate cancer commencing androgen deprivation therapy, both total as well as, although not in all studies (Smith 2004), visceral fat mass increases (Hamilton et al. 2011) within 3 months
  • More prolonged (>12 months) androgen deprivation therapy has been associated with increased risk of diabetes in several large observational registry studies
  • Testosterone has also been shown to reduce the concentration of pro-inflammatory cytokines in some, but not all studies, reviewed recently in Kelly & Jones (2013). It is not know whether this effect is independent of testosterone-induced changes in body composition.
  • the observations discussed in this section suggest that it is the decrease in testosterone that causes insulin resistance and diabetes. One important caveat remains: the strongest evidence that low testosterone is the cause rather than consequence of insulin resistance comes from men with prostate cancer (Grossmann & Zajac 2011a) or biochemical castration, and from mice lacking the androgen receptor.
  • Several large prospective studies have shown that weight gain or development of type 2 diabetes is major drivers of the age-related decline in testosterone levels
  • there is increasing evidence that healthy ageing by itself is generally not associated with marked reductions in testosterone
  • Circulating testosterone, on an average 30%, is lower in obese compared with lean men
  • increased visceral fat is an important component in the association of low testosterone and insulin resistance
  • The vast majority of men with metabolic disorders have functional gonadal axis suppression with modest reductions in testosterone levels
  • obesity is a dominant risk factor
  • men with Klinefelter syndrome have an increased risk of metabolic disorders. Interestingly, greater body fat mass is already present before puberty
  • Only 5% of men with type 2 diabetes have elevated LH levels
  • inhibition of the gonadal axis predominantly takes place in the hypothalamus, especially with more severe obesity
  • Metabolic factors, such as leptin, insulin (via deficiency or resistance) and ghrelin are believed to act at the ventromedial and arcuate nuclei of the hypothalamus to inhibit gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GNRH) secretion from GNRH neurons situated in the preoptic area
  • kisspeptin has emerged as one of the most potent secretagogues of GNRH release
  • hypothesis that obesity-mediated inhibition of kisspeptin signalling contributes to the suppression of the HPT axis, infusion of a bioactive kisspeptin fragment has been recently shown to robustly increase LH pulsatility, LH levels and circulating testosterone in hypotestosteronaemic men with type 2 diabetes
  • A smaller study with a similar experimental design found that acute testosterone withdrawal reduced insulin sensitivity independent of body weight, whereas oestradiol withdrawal had no effects
  • suppression of the diabesity-associated HPT axis is functional, and may hence be reversible
  • Obesity and dysglycaemia and associated comorbidities such as obstructive sleep apnoea (Hoyos et al. 2012b) are important contributors to the suppression of the HPT axis
  • weight gain and development of diabetes accelerate the age-related decline in testosterone
  • Modifiable risk factors such as obesity and co-morbidities are more strongly associated with a decline in circulating testosterone levels than age alone
  • 55% of symptomatic androgen deficiency reverted to a normal testosterone or an asymptomatic state after 8-year follow-up, suggesting that androgen deficiency is not a stable state
  • Weight loss can reactivate the hypothalamic–pituitary–testicular axis
  • Leptin treatment resolves hypogonadism in leptin-deficient men
  • The hypothalamic–pituitary–testicular axis remains responsive to treatment with aromatase inhibitors or selective oestrogen receptor modulators in obese men
  • Kisspeptin treatment increases LH secretion, pulse frequency and circulating testosterone levels in hypotestosteronaemic men with type 2 diabetes
  • change in BMI was associated with the change in testosterone (Corona et al. 2013a,b).
  • weight loss can lead to genuine reactivation of the gonadal axis by reversal of obesity-associated hypothalamic suppression
  • There is pre-clinical and observational evidence that chronic hyperglycaemia can inhibit the HPT axis
  • in men who improved their glycaemic control over time, testosterone levels increased. By contrast, in those men in whom glycaemic control worsened, testosterone decreased
  • testosterone levels should be measured after successful weight loss to identify men with an insufficient rise in their testosterone levels. Such men may have HPT axis pathology unrelated to their obesity, which will require appropriate evaluation and management.
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    Article discusses the expanding evidence of low T and Metabolic syndrome.
Nathan Goodyear

The Androgen Derivative 5α-Androstane-3β,17β-Diol Inhibits Prostate Cancer Ce... - 0 views

  • In the early stages, prostate cancer growth is dependent on circulating androgens
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      This is in contrast to studies that show poor prognosis with Lower T at time of diagnosis of prostate cancer
  • 5α-reductase not only provides a potent amplification of the androgenic signal ( 4– 6), but it also prevents estrogen formation by subtracting testosterone from the action of aromatase ( 7, 8), thus blocking activation of the estrogen receptor subtypes (ERα and ERβ; refs. 9, 10)
  • ERβ is the prevailing subtype ( 11), and a growing body of evidence points to the protective role of this receptor in prostate cancer
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  • It has been shown that the transformation of the dihydrotestosterone to 5α-androstane-3α,17β-diol (3α-diol) and 5α-androstane-3β,17β-diol (3β-Adiol), generates two metabolites unable to bind the androgen receptor, but possessing a very high affinity for the estrogen receptors
  • the effects of testosterone may result from the balance between the androgenic and the estrogenic molecules originating from its catabolism.
  • Recent data have been published postulating a direct estrogenic role of the 3β-hydroxylated derivatives of dihydrotestosterone in the prostate development and homeostasis
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    Here is the full article.
Nathan Goodyear

AroER Tri-Screen™ is a Biologically Relevant Assay for Endocrine Disrupting C... - 0 views

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    Paxil is estrogen receptor agonist.  What is interesting about this is that the FDA just approved this as a non-hormonal way to reduce hot flashes--but it is paxil under a different name.  It is non-hormonal--yeah right.  The organization making the approval doesn't know what they are doing at worse, or like the IOM stated are not up with the latest scientific knowledge.
Nathan Goodyear

Benign prostatic hyperplasia: a new meta... [J Endocrinol Invest. 2014] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    The authors of this paper describe BPH as a metabolic disease: involving inflammation with increased expression of TLRs, hormone imbalance and altered metabolism
Nathan Goodyear

Oestradiol levels in diabetic men with and without a... [Q J Med. 1987] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    High Estradiol is reproducible finding in men with Diabetes.  Link to MI not able to be determined.
Nathan Goodyear

Salivary estradiol and testosterone in filipin... [Am J Hum Biol. 2014] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Study finds association between elevated Estradiol in young men and obesity.  No correlation was found with Testosterone.  This fits other research that points to early increased Estradiol production and late decrease in low T.  The men in this study were "young".  Testing was done in saliva.
Nathan Goodyear

Treatment of male infertility secondary to morbid obesity - 0 views

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    Impact of obesity on infertility and sex hormone production in men.
Nathan Goodyear

Analysis of Relations between serum levels of Epitestosterone, Estradiol, Testosterone,... - 0 views

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    Great confusion exists in the medical profession about Testosterone and PSA and the health of the prostate. The conversion of Estrogen, whether E2 or E1, and other variables are responsible for increases in PSA while on Testosterone therapy. This study points out that Estradiol in men stimulates cell line growth of prostate cancer. In contrast, Epitestosterone, an androgen metabolite, has antiandrogen, inhibits this estrogen activity. Epitestosterone exists in an inverse relationship to Estradiol and IGF-1.
Nathan Goodyear

The Role of Estrogens in Prostate Carcinogenesis: A Rationale for Chemoprevention - 0 views

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    Good review of the mixed pathway of hormones in cancer development--prostate.  Estrogens, through estrogen receptors, promote prostate cancer development and growth.
Nathan Goodyear

Obesity, Androgens, Estrogens, and Cancer risk - 0 views

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    good discussion of the relationship between obesity, hormones and cancer. This article also contrasts the difference between men and women.
Nathan Goodyear

Aromatase and regulating the estr... [J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2010] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Balance of Testosterone and Estradiol plays role in prostate disease.   With age in men comes declining Testosterone, yet estrogen productions stay the same to increase.  This significantly alters the estrogen receptors and prostate disease risk.
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