Sex hormones are secreted at different rates in men who are severely
depressed than those who are not depressed, a team of eight medical doctors
associated with the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry in Munich has
determined.
"Our data suggest that men who suffer from severe major depression have
disturbance of gonadal function as reflected by decreased testosterone
concentration," said Dr. Ulrich Schweiger, head of the study.
Comparison of men with depression and those without showed:
- Lower testosterone concentrations during daytime and significantly lower
concentrations at night and across the 24-hour period.
- Similar concentrations of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and
luteinizing hormone in both groups, but the LH pulse was lower in depressed
men.
- Cortisol concentration 68 percent higher in men with major depression than
in the comparison group.
- A negative relationship between cortisol and testosterone, that is, the
higher the cortisol, the lower the testosterone levels.
The major implication of this study is that low testosterone may be one of
several mechanisms in which severe depressive disorders impair sexual
function and increase the risk of myocardial infarction and osteoporosis.
"Previous studies of sex hormone concentration in depressed individuals had
yielded inconsistent and ambiguous results," said Schweiger. "Possibly
because some patients in those studies were only mildly depressed." The new
research is reported in the June issue of Psychosomatic Medicine.
Schweiger and colleagues analyzed scores of blood samples from 15 male
inpatients with major depression who were 22 to 73 years old, and 22 healthy
men aged 23 to 85 in a comparison group, taken across a 24-hour period.
Blood was drawn every half-hour during the day, every 10 minutes from 6 p.m.
to midnight, and every 30 minutes from midnight to 7:30 a.m.
A major objective of the study was to analyze the functioning of the
hypothal
'"/>
Contact: Ulrich Schweiger, M.D.
schweiger.u@psychiatry.mu-luebeck.de
49-451-5002454
Center for the Advancement of Health
24-May-1999
Page: 1 2 Related medicine news :1.
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