Women's Menopause Health
Center
Below is a copy of a USA Today article published Jan. 26, 2004 that
outlines the results of a 19-year study on testosterone and
Alzheimer’s Disease. This study was published in the journal
"Neurology."
This study is significant in Alzheimer’s prevention and research.
However, it is important to differentiate between natural and
synthetic hormones when looking at Alzheimer’s prevention. Most
physicians and health care providers using natural hormone replacement
take the stance that there are no side effects to preserving or
replacing your normal hormonal status. The only side effects are those
related to replacing hormones that are not identical to what the body
produces.
In short, bioidentical is good and synthetic is not. If using
testosterone for Alzheimer’s prevention, be sure to use only USP
bioidentical testosterone.
"Declining Testosterone Might Put Men at Risk for Alzheimer's
By Kathleen Fackelmann, USA Today
Jan.26, 2004
Low levels of the male sex hormone testosterone may put healthy men at
risk of developing Alzheimer's years later, a new study suggests. The
report, released today in the journal Neurology, provides yet another
clue into the factors that influence the development of Alzheimer's, a
degenerative brain disease that afflicts 4.5 million people in the
USA.
Susan Resnick at the National Institute on Aging, part of the National
Institutes of Health, and her colleagues analyzed data from 574 men
ages 32 to 87 who had participated in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study
of Aging. The team measured levels of "free" testosterone in the
blood. Free testosterone is not attached to a protein and thus is able
to interact with brain cells — and possibly protect them.
The team also evaluated the men for signs of Alzheimer's, an incurable
disease that leads to memory problems and ultimately death. During the
19-year study, 54 men received a diagnosis of Alzheimer's.
The researchers found that higher levels of free testosterone seemed
to protect men from Alzheimer's. The team reports that for every 50%
increase in free testosterone in the blood, there was a 26% reduction
in the risk of
developing the disease.
Testosterone usually declines with age, but the team found that men
who later developed Alzheimer's had testosterone levels that fell
dramatically, in most cases below what is considered normal. By the
end of the study, men with Alzheimer's had blood levels of
testosterone that were half the levels of the men who remained
healthy.
In some cases, the drop in testosterone was detected up to a decade
before the men were diagnosed with Alzheimer's.
Testosterone might protect the brain by preventing beta amyloid, an
abnormal sticky substance, from clumping to form the senile plaque
that is at the heart of Alzheimer's, says Eva Hogervorst, a dementia
researcher at Oxford University in England who wrote an accompanying
editorial in the journal.
Estrogen might protect the brain in the same way, says Sam Gandy, a
spokesman for the Alzheimer's Association in Chicago. But he and
others warn that the final story is likely to be complicated. A recent
study suggested that estrogen might increase the risk of dementia in
older women.
About 800,000 men in the USA already take testosterone in the hopes
that the sex hormone will restore a sluggish libido or improve memory,
the editorial says. That's risky, though: The sex hormone has been
linked to stroke and might increase the risk of prostate cancer, the
second leading cause of cancer death among men."
Again, we need to differentiate between natural and synthetic
hormones. Taking testosterone or estrogen is risky if the hormones are
synthetic. These unnatural components place the body at risk for
disease.
When considering estrogen, progesterone or testosterone replacement
for health, use only bioidentical hormones that are USP certified.
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