A cross-sectional study of testosterone deficiency and inflammatory markers in older men
Iwona Rotter, Żaneta Ciosek, Anna Syroka, Aleksandra Ryl

TL;DR
This study explores how low testosterone and inflammation are linked in older men, suggesting a possible connection between testosterone deficiency and metabolic issues.
Contribution
The study identifies a potential association between testosterone deficiency and elevated inflammatory markers in aging men.
Findings
Higher hsCRP levels correlate with increased BMI and unfavorable metabolic profiles in men without testosterone deficiency.
Testosterone deficiency and elevated inflammation markers are linked to worse metabolic and body measurements.
The study highlights the need for further research into the biological pathways connecting inflammation and testosterone deficiency.
Abstract
This cross-sectional study aimed to examine the relationship between total testosterone (TT) levels, the diagnosis of testosterone deficiency syndrome (TDS), and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) concentrations in aging men. The analysis also included selected hormonal and anthropometric parameters. Serum hsCRP levels were measured. Additionally, serum levels of TT, estradiol (E2), dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S), insulin (I), and sex hormone-binding protein (SHBG) were assessed using ELISA. Patients were divided based on the presence or absence of a TDS diagnosis. In patients without TDS, no significant correlation was observed between hsCRP levels and other measured variables. However, higher hsCRP levels were associated with an increased BMI, larger waist and hip circumferences, and elevated triglyceride (TAG) levels compared to patients with lower hsCRP…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHormonal and reproductive studies · Doping in Sports · Muscle metabolism and nutrition
