Credit: www.alvaradohospital.com |
Lose Weight and Up Your
“Man-Fitness”
Weight loss can reduce the prevalence of low testosterone
levels in overweight, middle-aged men with prediabetes by almost 50 percent, a
new study finds.
“Doctors should first encourage overweight men with low
testosterone levels to try to lose weight through diet and exercise before
resorting to testosterone therapy to raise their hormone levels,” said study
co-author Frances Hayes, MD, professor at St. Vincent’s University Hospital,
Dublin.
The new study involved nearly 900 men with prediabetes (also
called impaired glucose tolerance) who had participated in the Diabetes
Prevention Program. That now-completed U.S. study showed that people at
high risk of Type 2 diabetes could delay or avoid developing the disease
through weight loss. Because overweight men are more likely to have low
testosterone levels, Hayes and her colleagues studied the effect of weight loss
on men’s testosterone levels.
The investigators excluded men from the study who had a
known diagnosis of hypogonadism or were taking medications that could interfere
with testosterone levels. Hypogonadism is a condition characterized by low
testosterone levels with symptoms of male hormone deficiency. Symptoms can
include reduced sex drive, poor erections, enlarged breasts and low sperm
counts.
The study population had 891 middle-aged men, with an
average age of 54 years. The men were randomly assigned to receive one of three
treatments: 293 men to lifestyle modification, 305 to the diabetes drug
metformin (Diabetmin, Glucophage)and
293 to inactive placebo pills. Lifestyle modifications consisted of exercising
for 150 minutes a week and eating less fat and fewer calories.
The results showed that low testosterone levels are common
in overweight men with prediabetes, Hayes said. At the beginning of the study,
nearly one in four men had low testosterone levels, considered to be below 300
nanograms per deciliter.
With lifestyle modification, the prevalence of low
testosterone levels decreased from about 20 percent to 11 percent after one
year, a 46 percent decrease, the authors reported. The prevalence of low
testosterone was unchanged in the metformin group (24.8 versus 23.8 percent)
and the placebo group (25.6 versus 24.6 percent).
Lose Weight and
Increase Testosterone Production
Men in the lifestyle modification group lost an average of
about 17 pounds (7.8 kilograms) over the one-year study, according to the
abstract. The increase in testosterone levels in that group correlated with
decreasing body weight and waist size.
“Losing weight not only reduces the risk of prediabetic men
progressing to diabetes but also appears to increase their body’s production of
testosterone,” Hayes said.
Researchers from Massachusetts
General Hospital in Boston and from Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois
in Lausanne, Switzerland, contributed to this
study, which received funding from the National Institutes of Health and the
American Diabetes Association.
###
The above story is based on the June 24, 2012 news release
by Endocrine
Society
The research data will presented on July 3, 2012 at The
Endocrine Society’s 94th Annual Meeting in Houston.
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