Is rising obesity causing a secular (age-independent) decline in testosterone among American men?
The testosterone of men in industrial societies peaks in their twenties and tends to decline with increasing age. Apart from this individual-level decline, there have been reports of a secular (age-independent population-level) decline in testosterone among American and Scandinavian men during the p...
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doaj-6115435fc11842589c79c25f3cac66be2020-11-25T02:29:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01810e7617810.1371/journal.pone.0076178Is rising obesity causing a secular (age-independent) decline in testosterone among American men?Allan MazurRonny WestermanUlrich MuellerThe testosterone of men in industrial societies peaks in their twenties and tends to decline with increasing age. Apart from this individual-level decline, there have been reports of a secular (age-independent population-level) decline in testosterone among American and Scandinavian men during the past few decades, possibly an indication of declining male reproductive health. It has been suggested that both declines in testosterone (individual-level and population-level) are due to increasing male obesity because men in industrial society tend to add body fat as they age, and overall rates of obesity are increasing. Using an unusually large and lengthy longitudinal dataset (991 US Air Force veterans examined in six cycles over 20 years), we investigate the relationship of obesity to individual and population-level declines in testosterone. Over twenty years of study, longitudinal decline in mean testosterone was at least twice what would be expected from cross-sectional estimates of the aging decline. Men who put on weight intensified their testosterone decline, some greatly so, but even among those who held their weight constant or lost weight during the study, mean testosterone declined 117 ng/dl (19%) over 20 years. We have not identified the reason for secular decline in testosterone, but we exclude increasing obesity as a sufficient or primary explanation, and we deny the supposition that men who avoid excessive weight will maintain their youthful levels of testosterone.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3797769?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Allan Mazur Ronny Westerman Ulrich Mueller |
spellingShingle |
Allan Mazur Ronny Westerman Ulrich Mueller Is rising obesity causing a secular (age-independent) decline in testosterone among American men? PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Allan Mazur Ronny Westerman Ulrich Mueller |
author_sort |
Allan Mazur |
title |
Is rising obesity causing a secular (age-independent) decline in testosterone among American men? |
title_short |
Is rising obesity causing a secular (age-independent) decline in testosterone among American men? |
title_full |
Is rising obesity causing a secular (age-independent) decline in testosterone among American men? |
title_fullStr |
Is rising obesity causing a secular (age-independent) decline in testosterone among American men? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Is rising obesity causing a secular (age-independent) decline in testosterone among American men? |
title_sort |
is rising obesity causing a secular (age-independent) decline in testosterone among american men? |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2013-01-01 |
description |
The testosterone of men in industrial societies peaks in their twenties and tends to decline with increasing age. Apart from this individual-level decline, there have been reports of a secular (age-independent population-level) decline in testosterone among American and Scandinavian men during the past few decades, possibly an indication of declining male reproductive health. It has been suggested that both declines in testosterone (individual-level and population-level) are due to increasing male obesity because men in industrial society tend to add body fat as they age, and overall rates of obesity are increasing. Using an unusually large and lengthy longitudinal dataset (991 US Air Force veterans examined in six cycles over 20 years), we investigate the relationship of obesity to individual and population-level declines in testosterone. Over twenty years of study, longitudinal decline in mean testosterone was at least twice what would be expected from cross-sectional estimates of the aging decline. Men who put on weight intensified their testosterone decline, some greatly so, but even among those who held their weight constant or lost weight during the study, mean testosterone declined 117 ng/dl (19%) over 20 years. We have not identified the reason for secular decline in testosterone, but we exclude increasing obesity as a sufficient or primary explanation, and we deny the supposition that men who avoid excessive weight will maintain their youthful levels of testosterone. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3797769?pdf=render |
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