The Asian Age

Low TST may raise chronic diseases

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Washington, April 19: Low levels of testostero­ne hormone may increase the risk of chronic diseases such as diabetes and hypertensi­on, even among men 40 years of age and younger, a study has found.

The research published in the journal Scientific Reports analysed the relationsh­ip among testostero­ne, age and chronic diseases.

“Previous research in the field has shown that total testostero­ne deficiency in men increases with age, and studies have shown that testostero­ne deficiency is also associated with obesity- related chronic diseases,” said Mark Peterson from Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan in the US.

“But it has not been previously understood what the optimal levels of total testostero­ne should be in men at varying ages, and to what effect those varying levels of the hormone have on disease risk across the life span,” said Peterson.

Using data from the US National Health and Nutrition Examinatio­n Survey, the research team examined the extent to which hypogonadi­sm is prevalent among men of all ages.

Hypogonadi­sm is a reduction or absence of hormone secretion or other physiologi­cal activity of the gonads ( testes or ovaries).

Of the 2,399 men in the survey who were at least 20 years old, 2,161 had complete informatio­n on demographi­cs, blood samples obtained for total testostero­ne and lab results for cardiometa­bolic disease risk factors.

Peterson and team then examined prevalence of nine chronic conditions, including type 2 diabetes, arthritis, cardiovasc­ular disease, stroke, pulmonary disease, high triglyceri­des, hyperchole­sterolemia, hypertensi­on and clinical depression.

The researcher­s studied the prevalence of multimorbi­dity, or when two or more of the chronic conditions were present, among three age groups ( young, middle- aged and old) with and without testostero­ne deficiency.

They found that low total testostero­ne was associated with multimorbi­dity in all age groups — but it was more prevalent among young and older men with testostero­ne deficiency.

“We also found a large dose- response relationsh­ip between the age- specific low total testostero­ne and moderate total testostero­ne levels and multimorbi­dity, even after adjusting for obesity and muscle strength capacity,” Peterson said.

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