Study confirms ‘he hormone’ link to heart attacks

Posted: Published on January 30th, 2014

This post was added by Dr Simmons

testosterone

11 hours ago

Heavily promoted male hormone products may be sending men flocking to stores, but their next stop may be the emergency room, according to a new study published Wednesday.

The research confirms earlier studies that show men with heart disease double their risk of heart attack soon after they start using testosterone gels or other supplements. And testosterone doubled the risk in men over 65 with or without heart disease.

"Patients and their physicians should discuss the risk of heart attacks when considering testosterone therapy, said Sander Greenland, a professor of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, who led the study.

Its a similar pattern to women using hormone replacement therapy after menopause doctors used to think it lowered the risk of heart attacks and cancer, but it in fact has the opposite effect.

The study, published in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS ONE, confirms the results of several smaller studies. One published in November found that the use of "low T" therapy boosted the risk of serious problems including heart attack, stroke and death in men who already had heart trouble and who had low testosterone.

And another one released in December found that men with higher levels of the male hormone are more likely to have weak or no response to a flu vaccine, meaning that their bodies dont mount a strong defense.

Nonetheless, the testosterone products are very heavily marketed to older men. And an influential essay in the New York Times Magazine, titled "The He Hormone," brought even more attention to the idea of "man-opause".

Greenlands team, along with experts at the National Cancer Institute and Consolidated Research, Inc., looked at the records of more than 55,000 men. Heart attack rates more than doubled in men over 65 in the 90 days after getting a testosterone prescription, and it more than tripled for men 75 or older.

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Study confirms 'he hormone' link to heart attacks

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