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Diabetes and Low T

Posted: Fri Feb 23, 2007 1:02 pm
by Paolo
20-FEB-2007

Low Testosterone In Men May Be Diabetes Risk Factor

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Men with testosterone levels in the low-normal range are much more likely to have diabetes than those with higher levels, whether or not they are obese, researchers report in the journal Diabetes Care.

"Low testosterone levels are common among men with diabetes and there is growing evidence that low testosterone may be a risk factor for developing diabetes," Dr. Elizabeth Selvin from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore commented to Reuters Health.

She and her colleagues analyzed data from 1,413 men 20 years or older who participated in the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. Diabetes had been diagnosed in 101 men.

After the influence of age, race and obesity was factored in, men with the lowest levels of testosterone were four times more likely to have diabetes than men with the highest levels. Similar results were found when only the bioavailable testosterone was measured.

The association persisted even after men with low total or free testosterone levels were excluded, suggesting, the researchers say, that the association is not entirely driven by failure to produce enough testosterone.

"Obesity affects testosterone levels; testosterone levels drop in men who are overweight or obese," Selvin pointed out. Yet, "even after accounting for the effect of obesity, low testosterone levels still appear to be an important risk factor for diabetes," she said.

These data, the researchers write, support the hypothesis that male hormones directly influence sugar metabolism and the development of insulin resistance, which is seen just before diabetes occurs, independent of the effects of obesity.

Selvin added that doctors should keep in mind that "low testosterone is a common finding among men with diabetes and may lead to other clinical problems."

SOURCE: Diabetes Care, February 2007.

Re: Diabetes and Low T

Posted: Sat Feb 24, 2007 6:19 am
by jcat (imported)
MMM maybe a healthy diet and low T is ok. Perhaps the average person who does not bother too much about diet etc is more susceptible to diabetes with low T if even if they ARE NOT OBESE.

Jcat

Re: Diabetes and Low T

Posted: Sat Feb 24, 2007 8:55 am
by n3rf (imported)
So - how do You "measure" T without a TEST-SETUP ??

Very interesting . N3RF

Re: Diabetes and Low T

Posted: Sat Feb 24, 2007 11:01 am
by Paolo
You have a doctor do a blood test to check your T levels. It's not like a blood sugar meter for testosterone exists...

Re: Diabetes and Low T

Posted: Sat Feb 24, 2007 11:23 am
by n3rf (imported)
So is it an IR test of a chemical reaction test ? N3RF

Re: Diabetes and Low T

Posted: Sat Feb 24, 2007 4:45 pm
by Paolo
I have no idea.

They take some blood, ship it off, charge you about $2 million for it, and tell you something...

Re: Diabetes and Low T

Posted: Sat Feb 24, 2007 5:19 pm
by n3rf (imported)
Well it is either a spectral analysis or some chemical test reaction.

I use a set of girl - pictures - that use to give me a "tingle" or "feeling of something" and I judge my T by that . I don't know how factual it is but it sure is Subjective.

Maybe some member has some experience how T is actually measured and is it in milligrams per unit quantity of Urine and in the Blood. 2 million dollars sounds horribly high so if we know what the Spectral Frequency is, maybe a diode laser could be set up for that frequency and see how much is transmitted or absorbed by the sample.

The security people are using all kinds of new and very small devices to sense gook stuff so why cannot we use something similar for our gook stuff .. Hi N3RF