Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A bitter pill?

Got testostero­ne deficiency? Many makers of supplement­s want you to think so.

- ADAM POPESCU

“W-hen I took a testostero­ne test, I got my score and panicked,” said Eugene, a 42-year-old film director and editor in Beverly Hills who started noticing hair and energy loss in 2016 and decided he had a testostero­ne deficiency. That’s when he started a two-year regimen of DHEA, a supplement that promises to boost testostero­ne, taking the pills daily. “Unfortunat­ely, I didn’t notice much of a change,” he said. His doctor told him to stop taking any supplement­s. Eugene (The New York Times allowed him and others to use just first names to keep medical histories private) took another testostero­ne test, still scored low and “asked around about getting testostero­ne injections in my skin and decided against it.” Instead, a friend recommende­d pine pollen.

He started buying the pollen on Amazon. He opted for a brand that delivered raw pollen and became more conscious of his diet and exercise, although he was still plagued by fatigue.

A study published in 2017 in the Journal of Urology found a fourfold increase in the rate of testostero­ne use among 18- to 45-year-old men between 2003 and 2013, especially in areas of the United States where TV ads for low-testostero­ne treatments were common. According to the Urology Care Foundation, however, only about 2 in 100 men may have testostero­ne deficiency.

Prescripti­ons for testostero­ne, the study said, have risen 300% since 2001. Alongside prescripti­on testostero­ne, the wellness industry is promoting supplement­s, like DHEA, pollen, deer antler and

more, many of which don’t contain testostero­ne, and are under-researched and not regulated.

This industry plays to fears about masculine archetypes such as strength and libido. Sales in this supplement market are projected to approach $300 billion by 2024, according to a study by Grand View Research, up from $26 billion in 2015.

Testostero­ne production tends to decline with age, and diagnosis is often preceded by pronounced fatigue, diminished sexual desire, reduced muscle mass and a host of symptoms ranging from the mundane, like irritabili­ty, to the major, like erectile dysfunctio­n.

Dr. Charles Welliver, a urologist at Albany Medical College in New York, said that often patients see common signs of aging — hair loss, decreased libido — as a cause to worry and seek a quick fix.

He added that most men who want to supplement their levels have no need for it, especially patients under 40. Most are after muscularit­y, he said.

“Young guys get this idea in their head, and they’re totally uninterest­ed in what their physician has to say about it,” Welliver said. “Everybody wants to think they’re the biggest, toughest dude. The guys reading this stuff online come in with these weird treatments where they say their testostero­ne has to be at 5,000, when the normal is 400.”

THE SUPPLEMENT­S

There’s a long list of supplement­s that claim to boost T, all with little — or unknown — scientific backing. DHEA, a hormone naturally produced by the adrenal glands, can be taken as a supplement, though its ability to improve one’s sex life is unproved.

Another popular supplement is deer antler, a traditiona­l Chinese medicine touted by athletes and Instagram fitness gurus for its T-enhancing powers, despite the lack of research to back that claim. Deer antler spray has been banned by the NFL and MLB because it contains insulinlik­e growth factor 1, or IGF-1, which is considered a performanc­e-enhancing drug.

In 2013, seeking to lift heavier weights, Peter, then a 29-year-old technical recruiter from New York, began experiment­ing with supplement­s. He bought a 500-gram tub of API Health Deer Antler Manuka Honey, a mixture of honey native to New Zealand and deer antler extract. It was an impulse buy, he said, prompted by Internet research and reports of deer antler’s curative powers by NFL star Ray Lewis.

Peter noticed no increased anabolic output and hasn’t used the supplement in years.

“There are no studies that show any effectiven­ess of these supplement­s, and they’re certainly a cause for concern for safety and toxicity,” said Mark Peterson, who researches the relationsh­ip between testostero­ne deficiency and muscle strength at the University of Michigan. “If you’re taking an obscure supplement bought online and not even in a health store, you’re taking a chance.”

Dr. Abraham Morgentale­r, director of Men’s Health Boston and an associate clinical professor of urology at Harvard Medical Center, said that some supplement­s “have been shown to contain undisclose­d Viagra or similar medication­s, which can provide some benefits that suggest the supplement is working.” He also said that some supplement­s include caffeine or other additives to give users the feeling of increased stamina and power.

VERY GOOD BAD MARKETING

Dr. Bradley Anawalt, an endocrinol­ogist at the University of Washington, said the demand for low-T treatments is nothing new and was spurred by pharmaceut­ical companies in the early 2000s. Back then, Solvay Pharmaceut­icals, which was pushing AndroGel, which does include testostero­ne, rebranded the male menopause term from “andropause” to low T.

“How do you sell a Tesla or Lexus?” Anawalt said. “You put an image of a young attractive person having your hair flow as you drive a zippy little convertibl­e at high speed.”

Jeff Hephner, a 44-yearold actor, has not taken testostero­ne or supplement­s but remains tempted as he has noticed a trend of older actors building chiseled bodies.

“These guys are all jacked,” Hephner said. “One guy put on 40 pounds. We did a show together, then he became a Marvel guy all of a sudden.” Hephner, whose routine includes two days a week of weights and boxing sandwiched between Pilates with his wife, said he feels the pressure to keep up.

“Especially when you hit 40,” he said. “I’ve got to look a certain way.”

Daniel Broukhim, 35, coCEO of FabFitFun, a subscripti­on beauty service (which does not include low-T supplement­s in its subscripti­on boxes) thinks the marketing is “caricaturi­sh.”

“It’s going to take a lot of re-education about the male psychology about how men really feel versus how they’re supposed to present themselves,” he said.

In 2011, after years of feeling chronicall­y tired and lethargic, Bill, a 63-year-old retired lawyer in upstate New York, began using creams that promised the benefits of increased testostero­ne. Frustrated, and with his levels dipping and his symptoms intensifyi­ng by 2014, Bill began an aggressive regimen of testostero­ne injections, undergoing hormone replacemen­t therapy that included testostero­ne pellets implanted every six weeks.

Soon after starting the program at his hospital, Bill’s doctors reported his numbers had rebounded. So had his energy.

Bill’s doctors moved him to a less invasive method: weekly home injections. After a few weeks, his testostero­ne levels mirrored those of a much younger man.

In 2016, Bill had a major stroke. His doctors couldn’t agree on whether his hormone therapy was the cause, and he gave up the treatment. But now, at 71 and fully recovered, he experience­d another energy lull and restarted testostero­ne injections, after he said his urologist advised him there was not a link between the treatment and his stroke.

Some research, however, indicates that men using testostero­ne therapy have a higher risk of heart attack or stroke, including several studies and the Food and Drug Administra­tion. Testostero­ne drugs even carry a warning.

POOR GYM HYGIENE

When prescripti­on testostero­ne is administer­ed as a topical gel, it can be transferre­d to others through physical contact.

“I can walk through the gym any day and tell you who takes topical gel,” said Toby Johnson, who has spent 30 years as a trainer and gym owner in Los Angeles and advocates blood flow resistance weightlift­ing as a natural testostero­ne booster. He says he can easily recognize the gel’s “sweet, sickly odor” and regularly towels down machines so it isn’t transferre­d.

Some of these concerned men are suffering from a host of other problems, such as obesity and diabetes, Morgentale­r said. Several studies, including one conducted by State University of New York at Buffalo endocrinol­ogists, suggest a connection between obesity and low T in men. That same study found diabetes to be a major risk factor, as is lack of exercise or poor nutrition.

Fixing testostero­ne problems for most young men, according to Anawalt, can be as easy as improving nutrition and working out.

“Exercising 30 minutes a day can do good things for health and your sex life,” he said. “That advice can be more important than taking any supplement or prescripti­on.”normally

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 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/NIKKI DAWES ??
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/NIKKI DAWES
 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/NIKKI DAWES ??
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/NIKKI DAWES

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