Decline in estrogens may cause Lower Sex Drive

This study has been all over the media this week.

Just as the symptoms of menopause in women are attributed to a sharp drop in estrogen production, symptoms often seen in middle-aged men – changes in body composition, energy, strength and sexual function – are usually attributed to the less drastic decrease in testosterone production that typically occurs in the middle years. However, a study by Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers finds that insufficient estrogen could be at least partially responsible for some of these symptoms. “This study establishes testosterone levels at which various physiological functions start to become impaired, which may help provide a rationale for determining which men should be treated with testosterone supplements,” says Joel Finkelstein, MD, of the MGH Endocrine Unit, corresponding author of the study in the Sept. 12 New England Journal of Medicine. “But the biggest surprise was that some of the symptoms routinely attributed to testosterone deficiency are actually partially or almost exclusively caused by the decline in estrogens that is an inseparable result of lower testosterone levels.”

Traditionally a diagnosis of male hypogonadism – a drop in reproductive hormone levels great enough to cause physical symptoms – has been based on a measure of blood testosterone levels alone. Although such diagnoses have increased dramatically – leading to a 500 percent increase in U.S. testosterone prescriptions between 1993 and 2000, the authors note – there has been little understanding of the levels of testosterone needed to support particular functions.

In addition to its direct action on some physical functions, a small portion of the testosterone that men make is normally converted into estrogen by an enzyme called aromatase. The higher the testosterone level in a normal man, the more is converted into estrogen. Since any drop in testosterone means that there is less to be converted into estrogen, men with low testosterone also have low estrogen levels, making it unclear which hormones support which functions. The MGH team set out to determine the levels of hormone deficiency at which symptoms begin to occur in men and whether those changes are attributable to decreased levels of testosterone, estrogens or both.

The study enrolled two groups of men with normal reproductive function, ages 20 to 50, and all participants were first treated with a drug that suppresses normal production of all reproductive hormones. Men in the first group were randomly assigned to receive daily doses of testosterone gel at one of four dosage levels or a placebo gel for 16 weeks. Men in the second group received the same testosterone doses along with an aromatase inhibitor which markedly suppressed conversion of testosterone into estrogen. More than 150 men in each group completed the study, including monthly visits for blood tests and questionnaires about their overall health and sexual function. Body composition and leg strength were assessed at the beginning and end of the study period.

Among participants in whom estrogen production was not blocked, increases in body fat were seen at what would be considered a mild level of testosterone deficiency. Decreases in lean body mass, the size of the thigh muscle and leg strength did not develop until testosterone levels became quite low. In terms of sexual function, sexual desire was reported to decrease progressively with each drop in testosterone levels, whereas erectile function was preserved until testosterone levels were extremely low.

In participants also receiving the aromatase inhibitor, increases in body fat were seen at all testosterone dose levels, but suppressing estrogen production had no effect on lean mass, muscle size or leg strength. Adverse effects on sexual function were much more obvious when estrogen synthesis was suppressed regardless of participants’ testosterone levels. Overall the results imply that testosterone levels regulate lean body mass, muscle size and strength, while estrogen levels regulate fat accumulation. Sexual function – both desire and erectile function – is regulated by both hormones.

Finkelstein notes that this study artificially induced the kind of hormone deficiency usually seen in aging men to provide a controlled model. He and his colleagues hope to do follow-up studies in older men to confirm the accuracy of the model. Right now, decisions about whether an individual is a candidate for testosterone replacement should be made based on his symptoms and not just his testosterone level. The findings regarding estrogen’s effects suggest that the forms of testosterone used for therapy should be capable of being aromatized into estrogen, he adds.

“We also need to look into how testosterone replacement therapy would effect prostate health – both prostate cancer and the prostate enlargement that causes unpleasant symptoms in many older men – and heart disease,” says Finkelstein, who is an associate professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. “In light of what the Women’s Health Initiative discovered about the unexpected effects of estrogen replacement therapy in women, we need a Men’s Health Initiative to investigate those questions before large-scale testosterone replacement can be recommended.”

esciencenews.com/articles/2013/0 … hanges.men

Estrogen, the “female” hormone, is a lot more important to men than even many doctors think, according to a surprising new study published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston found that it’s actually a lack of estrogen that’s most responsible for the accumulation of body fat plaguing men with low testosterone levels, raising their risks of cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Low estrogen is also a big contributor to the sexual dysfunction and low libido usually blamed solely on low testosterone.

The research could change the way doctors prescribe hormones for men, experts suggest.

“It’s a blockbuster, a mind bender for the general public and many scientists,” Brad Anawalt, an endocrinologist and vice chair of the Department of Medicine at the University of Washington, who was not involved with the study, told NBC News.

Men make about 80 percent of their estrogen through the conversion of testosterone into an estrogen by an enzyme called aromatase. So when testosterone drops, so does estrogen. Low testosterone itself is linked to declines in lean muscle mass, muscle size, and strength, the study found.

That low estrogen weakens male bones, as it does in post-menopausal women, has long been known. But most effects of “low T,” more properly called hypogonadism, have been blamed on low testosterone itself, helping fuel a more than 500 percent spike in prescriptions from 1993 to 2000. Despite concerns of possible harmful side effects, the percentage of American men over 40 receiving testosterone approximately tripled to nearly 3 percent of the population from 2001 to 2011, according to a study published this year in JAMA Internal Medicine.

A normal range for testosterone – between 300 and 1,000 nanograms per deciliter of blood – is based on the mean levels found in the general population. But the study revealed that a healthy range should really depend upon the individual body tissue or system. It’s not one-size-fits-all.

As testosterone drops – beginning about age 35 – the first thing affected is sexual function, due to both low testosterone and estrogen, Anawalt explained. Further drops begin to affect fat metabolism due to low estrogen. Finally, with very low testosterone, muscle mass and strength fall.

Currently, a man with a measure of 300, and complaining of lower muscle mass and strength, might be given a testosterone prescription. Thanks to advertising “we think of testosterone like sprinkling on table salt,” Anawalt said.

But now, “if he has a T level of 300, this study suggests that his loss of strength is not related to testosterone level, he’s just [age] 50,” Anawalt said.

Conversely, a man with a level at 300 but who has a different problem, might need more testosterone, endocrinologist Joel Finkelstein, who led the study, explained.

"If you come in and I say, ‘Oh, God, fat’s accumulating on this guy,’ it’s not enough. That fat is accumulating because of a drop in estrogen.”

Then, a doctor may wish to prescribe extra testosterone as a way to boost estrogen, Finkelstein said.

The study used 400 healthy men between 20 and 50 years old. All the men were given a drug to stop their production of testosterone and estrogen and divided into two groups. Some men in one group were then given a placebo testosterone replacement product, while others were given increasing doses of the real thing.

The men in the other group were given the same replacement dosages, but also a drug to inhibit aromatase, so their bodies would make almost no estrogen.

Finkelstein’s team then tracked the way the subjects’ bodies reacted over a period of 16 weeks by using scans, surveys, and strength tests.

The men who received replacement doses of testosterone, but whose estrogen production was blocked, showed significant increases in three key body fat measures as well as erectile dysfunction and low sexual desire.

“When you lose estrogen, it’s all bad,” Finkelstein said. “With estrogen loss you get fat accumulation, loss of libido, bone loss.”

Because those effects are related to osteoporosis, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, the “billion dollar question” is whether older men should be routinely given testosterone replacement to increase both their T levels and estrogen levels as part of preventive medicine, Finkelstein said.

“What do we do about men as they age into their 60s, 70s, 80s? Is it helpful or harmful? Both? Neither? We don’t know,” Finkelstein added.

The Mass General researchers plan to repeat the study using groups of older men to find out.

Both Finkelstein and Anawalt cited the Women’s Health Initiative, a huge study that found unexpected risks with hormone replacement therapy for post-menopausal women, as a cautionary tale.

However, Anawalt suggested doctors would be “hard-pressed” to prove prescribing testosterone for most older men at a dosage enough to raise it above normal is risky.

“If we cannot prove harm, and the potential benefit is sex function, perhaps lower fat accumulation, a number of doctors and patients are going to glom onto that and say it sounds like a good plan,” he said.

Still, Anawalt added, “I predict a number of us would be leery about it.”

nbcnews.com/health/men-need- … 8C11132419