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Older
Age does not cause Testosterone Levels to
decline in Healthy Men
Newswise, June 14, 2011 — A decline in testosterone levels
as men grow older is likely the result—not
the cause—of deteriorating general health,
say Australian scientists, whose new study
finds that age, in itself, has no effect on
testosterone level in healthy older men.
The results, presented at The
Endocrine Society’s 93rd Annual Meeting in
Boston, are the first findings released from
the Healthy Man Study, according to
principal investigator David Handelsman, MD,
PhD, professor and director of the ANZAC
Research Institute at the University of
Sydney.
“Some researchers believe that an
age-related testosterone deficiency
contributes to the deteriorating health of
older men and causes nonspecific symptoms,
such as tiredness and loss of libido,” he
said.
Handelsman and his team, however, found that
serum (blood) testosterone levels did not
decline with increasing age in older men who
reported being in excellent health with no
symptoms to complain of.
“We had originally expected age to have an
effect on serum testosterone, so the
findings were a bit of a surprise,”
Handelsman said.
Two study centers in Australia recruited 325
men over the age of 40 (median age, 60) who
had self-reported excellent health and no
symptom complaints.
To test blood testosterone levels, the
researchers took blood samples from the men
nine times over three months. They excluded
men from the study who took medications that
affect testosterone.
Obesity caused a mild and clinically
unimportant lowering of blood testosterone
levels, the investigators reported. Age had
no effect on testosterone level.
“The modest decline in blood testosterone
among older men, usually coupled with
nonspecific symptoms, such as easy fatigue
and low sexual desire, may be due to
symptomatic disorders that accumulate during
aging, including obesity and heart disease,”
he said. “It does not appear to be a hormone
deficiency state.”
The message for patients and their doctors,
Handelsman said, is “older men with low
testosterone levels do not need testosterone
therapy unless they have diseases of their
pituitary or testes.”
This research was supported by the MBF
(Medical Benefits Fund) Foundation in
Sydney, which is part of the private health
insurer Bupa.
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