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Nathan Goodyear

Obesity, adipocytokines, and cancer - 0 views

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    adipocytokines, such as leptin and adiponectin, impact much more than insulin resistance and obesity. Leptin and adiponectin play some role in the development of certain cancers. Bringing together the common thread of inflammation
Nathan Goodyear

Curcumin attenuates the development of allergic airway inflammation and hyper-responsiveness. | GreenMedInfo | Article | Natural Medicine | Alternative Medicine | Integrative Medicine | Consumer Advocacy - 0 views

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    curcumin shown to inhibit allergic airway inflammation, through NF-kappaB inhibition.  This has implications in asthma flares.
Nathan Goodyear

Histochemistry and Cell Biology, Volume 127, Number 2 - SpringerLink - 0 views

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    Abstract only, but this study shows that the innate immunity plays a role in the development of obesity through the TLR.  LPS was shown to stimulate the inflammatory cascade through the TLRs
Nathan Goodyear

Adipose Tissue as an Endocrine Organ - 0 views

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    You need to look at your fat differently.  It literally has developed a life of its own.  Adipose Tissue functions as an endocrine organ.  Just like your thyroid, adrenals...
Nathan Goodyear

ScienceDirect - Cancer Letters : The glutathione-related detoxification pathway in the human breast: a highly coordinated system disrupted in the tumour tissues - 0 views

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    glutathione disruption is a component of breast cancer development
Nathan Goodyear

Diabetes mellitus and the risk of dementia: The Ro... [Neurology. 1999] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    the use of insulin in diabetes is associated with a 430% increase risk of developing dementia.  Wow!!  Just the present of Diabetes, almost doubled the risk.  Add in extra insulin and it is like throwing fuel to the fire that exists in the brain.
Nathan Goodyear

Advanced Glycation End Products in Alzheimer's Disease and Other Neurodegenerative Diseases - 0 views

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    AGE's, advanced glycation end products, play a role in development/progression of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's...
Nathan Goodyear

JAMA Network | Archives of Neurology | Damage to Lipids, Proteins, DNA, and RNA in Mild Cognitive Impairment - 0 views

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    oxidative damage found to be present in early Alzheimer's disease.  This early mild cognitive impairment is the time for treatment to delay disease progression.  As this study points out, most studies up to this point have been done on individuals with late Alzheimer's disease.  This show that oxidative damage plays a prominent role in disease development.  This study found oxidative damage through several markers: lipid peroxides,isoprostanes, 8-hydroxy-2-deoxyguanosine...
Nathan Goodyear

Bisphenol A Promotes Human Prostate Stem-Proge... [Endocrinology. 2014] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Another strike against BPA.  This time, BPA exposure during development increased hormone-dependent cancer risk in the prostate through its interaction with prostate stem-progenitor cells.  Again, we are being altered prior to birth.
Nathan Goodyear

Estrogen Receptor β in Prostate Cancer: Brake Pedal or Accelerator? - 0 views

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    Great article on ER beta and the prostate.  ER alpha expression is very important in the development of the prostate.  IN that instance, ER beta is down regulated.  In prostate cancer generation, ER beta expression in the epithelium is lost.
Nathan Goodyear

Biological functions and clinical implications of oestrogen receptors alfa and beta in epithelial tissues - Morani - 2008 - Journal of Internal Medicine - Wiley Online Library - 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
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • 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

Systemic sclerosis: environmental factors. [J Rheumatol. 2009] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Environmental toxins such as slice and organic solvents have been associated with the development of scleroderma.  Other exposures include bacterial, viral, pesticides, prescription drugs...
Nathan Goodyear

Epidemiology of Systemic Sclerosis - 0 views

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    silica exposure plays a role in the development of scleroderma
Nathan Goodyear

Elevated androgens and prolactin in aromatase-... [Endocrinology. 2001] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    aromatase knockout mice, thus elevated androgens without estrogen production, develop BPH but not prostate cancer.  This points to estrogen as the important hormone in carcinogenesis of the prostate. Granted this is a animal model.
Nathan Goodyear

Inflammatory cause of metabolic syndrome via brain stress and NF-?B - AGING Journal - 0 views

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    Inflammation plays key role in development of Metabolic syndrome at the level of the CNS.
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

Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) concentrations in hy... [BJU Int. 2013] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Study finds negligible effect of Testosterone therapy (4.8 mg) on PSA.  The study consisted of several phases, the longest being 6 years.  However, each phase the parcipitants significantly declined.  The long held belief that Testosterone and DHT promote an increase in PSA is just not supported in the science.  In fact, aromatase knockout mice don't develop prostate cancer, only BPH.
Nathan Goodyear

Testosterone deficiency: A determinant of ao... [Atherosclerosis. 2014] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    low Total Testosterone associated with CAD, particularly aortic.  Obviously, Testosterone, when low, is a marker of poor health in men.  However, low Testosterone can likely play a role in disease development, especially when age is factored in--low Testosterone in younger men likely plays an etiology versus a lesser impact in the elder.
Nathan Goodyear

Vitamin D in the healthy and inflamed central nervous system: access and function - 0 views

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    Vitamin D3 helpful in treatment of an inflamed CNS, such as in TBI, MS...Vitamin D protects against the development of MS and the progression of MS.
Nathan Goodyear

Estrogen Levels Are Associated with Extinction Deficits in Women with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder - 0 views

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    Women with lower estrogen levels more likely to develop PTSD.  This study looked at estradiol.  So, when this study references estrogen, it is referencing estradiol.
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