Compared to men using a fake testosterone gel, those using real
medication for one year improved on 10 out of 12 measures of sexual
activity, researchers found.
"There was a notable clinical difference in sexual function and
desire," said lead author Dr. Glenn Cunningham, of Baylor College of
Medicine and Baylor St. Luke's Medical Center in Houston, Texas.
Testosterone levels - or T levels - decrease as men age, and
symptoms like decreased sexual function and energy become more
common.
Testosterone therapy has improved sexual function in younger men
with low T levels caused by illnesses or medications, but it wasn't
known whether the treatment would also work for older men, the
researchers write in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and
Metabolism.
Their study involved 470 men over age 65, all with low T, low sexual
desire and a female partner willing to have sex at least twice per
month.
Half the men were randomly assigned to use testosterone gel for 12
months, and the other half used a fake gel called a placebo.
Several times during the year, participants were surveyed about
their sexual desire and activity and had blood drawn.
With testosterone gel, average T levels rose from 234 nanograms per
deciliter (ng/dL) to about 500 ng/dL, which is normal for men ages
19 to 40. T levels remained unchanged in the placebo group.
Men using the gel also had more sexual day dreams, orgasms, sexual
interactions with their partners, and erections at night and during
sexual activity. They reported anticipating sex, flirting,
ejaculating and masturbating more.
Increases in T levels were not tied to erectile function, however.
No particular characteristics in the men, and no particular T level,
could be linked with the likelihood of a response to the treatment,
the authors found.
Dr. Jeanne O’Brien, a urologist at the University of Rochester
Medical Center in upstate New York, said the results confirm what
urologists have suspected.
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Testosterone treatment "will not fix everything that’s wrong with
you, but it will increase your libido and desire to have sex," said
O'Brien, who was not involved with the new study.
The improvements may not be that large, cautioned Dr. Stephen Hammes,
chief of endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism at the University of
Rochester Medical Center.
For example, he said, at the end of the study, the treated men were
having sexual intercourse about once every 12 days, compared to once
every 11 days for men in the placebo group.
"Low testosterone is really, really difficult" to treat, said Hammes,
who also wasn't involved in the new study. "There isn’t a lot of
data. So anything they put out there is helpful."
Cunningham said the results only apply to older men with sexual
dysfunction and low T levels.
Also, he pointed out, testosterone therapy can have side effects,
including increased risks for cardiovascular disease and prostate
cancer.
"Until we have definitive information on this, one has to take
certain precautions to limit the number of people who are treated,"
Cunningham said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/297Zzic The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology
and Metabolism, online June 29, 2016.
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