Researchers uncover link between sex hormones, heart risk

By IANS,

London : When it comes to matters of heart, males are more vulnerable than females of similar age — blame it on sex hormones, says a new study.


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The findings of a study by Maciej Tomaszewski, cardiovascular lecturer at the University of Leicester, suggested that this “male disadvantage” may be related to the sex-specific effects of naturally occurring sex hormones.

The research by Tomaszewski and colleagues, involved 933 men with an average age of 19 years. They looked at ways that the sex hormones – estradiol, estrone, testosterone and androstenedione – interacted with three major risk factors of heart disease (cholesterol, blood pressure and weight).

They found that two of these sex hormones (estradiol and estrone, called estrogens) are linked to increased levels of bad cholesterol (LDL-cholesterol) and low levels of good cholesterol (HDL-cholesterol) in men.

This suggests that certain sex hormones may be important risk factors of heart disease in men, even before they present symptoms of coronary artery disease or stroke.

Tomaszewski said: “We hypothesised that circulating concentrations of sex hormones were associated with cardiovascular disease risk factors in men long before any apparent manifestations of cardiovascular disease such as stroke or myocardial infarction”.

“We examined associations of circulating estrogens (estradiol and estrone) as well as androgens (testosterone and androstenedione) with major cardiovascular risk factors (lipids, blood pressure, body mass) in 933 young, apparently healthy men.

“Our studies showed that one of the sex hormones – estradiol – was associated positively with total cholesterol and negatively with HDL-cholesterol.

Circulating concentrations of another sex hormone – estrone – showed strong positive associations with both total cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol.

“Thus, men with the highest concentrations of estrone and estradiol may have the highest level of cardiovascular risk as their levels of detrimental LDL-cholesterol are high whilst their cardio-protective HDL-cholesterol is low.

“Most importantly, the demonstrated associations between cholesterol and estrogens were independent of other sex hormones (testosterone and androstenedione), age, body weight, blood pressure and other potential confounding factors.

“Our data suggest that higher levels of estrogens may have negative influence on lipid profile in men early in life, before the apparent onset of cardiovascular disease.

“Why natural endogenous estrogens that are generally seen as cardio-protective in women increase cardiovascular risk in men remains to be elucidated. Future prospective studies are needed to confirm that higher levels of endogenous estrogens in youth increase the risk of heart disease later in man’s life.

The study has been published online in Atherosclerosis.

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