Men with low testosterone levels are more likely to die of cardiovascular disease, true, but that does not mean a testosterone therapy can prevent death from other diseases.
Australian researchers have debunked the testosterone myth. The hormone is no key to longevity. Men with low testosterone levels are more likely to die of cardiovascular disease, true, but that does not mean a testosterone therapy can prevent death from other diseases, a new study of older Western Australian men seems to show.
Published online this week in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, researchers from The University of Western Australia's Western Australian Centre for Health and Ageing set out to explore the association between testosterone levels and cause of death.
"Previous studies suggested that men with low testosterone levels are likely to die earlier, and some researchers have argued that testosterone therapy might improve longevity," said lead author and WA Centre for Health and Ageing researcher Zoë Hyde Ms Hyde.
"However, our results suggest that low testosterone is a risk factor only for cardiovascular disease, and do not provide support for more widespread use of testosterone."
Testosterone therapy is available in Australia only for men whose levels have been found to be low on testing and are experiencing symptoms of testosterone deficiency.
Ms Hyde said it was premature to recommend testosterone therapy to prevent cardiovascular disease.
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Ms Hyde said sex hormones played an important role in maintaining health and quality of life, particularly as their concentrations changed over time.
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Source-Medindia