20 Things You Didn't Know About... Testosterone
The manly hormone evolved 500
million years ago — from estrogen.
By Leah Shatter in Discover Magazine
1. Testosterone is produced in men’s testicles, women’s ovaries
and the adrenal glands of both sexes. In the early weeks of pregnancy, it kicks
off the development of reproductive organs for males.
2.
After birth, testosterone plays a role in regulating processes from fat
distribution to red blood cell production.
3.
Long before the hormone was discovered, people ascribed youth-restoring powers
to the testicles. Roman naturalist Pliny the Elder noted the sexually
stimulating effects of dining on hyena genitals (with honey, of course).
4.
Honeyed hyena testes sound preferable to the handiwork of Kansas huckster John
Brinkley, who inserted slices of goat scrotum into men’s testicles in the
1920s, claiming it would boost virility and cure a host of ailments.
5.
Despite its association with male virility, testosterone can also enhance a
woman’s libido by targeting receptors in a section of the brain responsible for
sexual activity.
6.
Sex hormones, including testosterone, evolved 500 million years ago — before the
first vertebrate animals — from the “mother” of all steroid hormones, estrogen.
7.
But testosterone is, relatively speaking, a manly hormone. Normal levels for
women are 5 to 7 percent of those for men.
8.
Testosterone levels decline with age. Fifty percent of men in their 80s have
testosterone levels below the normal adult male range.
9.
One thing that’s not declining: demand for testosterone. In 2010, 1.3 million
patients in the U.S. received a prescription for the hormone. That number
jumped to 2.3 million in 2013.
10. Age isn’t the only cause of low testosterone; obesity is,
too. With more body fat, more testosterone gets converted to an estrogen called
estradiol, which further inhibits testosterone production.
11. Low T from obesity is a particularly vicious cycle because
testosterone builds muscle apparently by stimulating the production of growth
hormone releasing hormone (GHRH), which correlates with lean body mass.
12. Yet it’s not clear if the benefits of testosterone
treatments outweigh the risks. Some studies have found an increased risk for
cardiovascular disease among older men after starting testosterone therapy.
Other studies suggested a decreased risk in overall mortality.
13. The hormone was first synthesized in 1935 after initial isolation
of another male hormone called androsterone, which was distilled from some
4,000 gallons of donated urine.
14. Dutch researchers coined the term testosterone that same
year.
15. There are more than 30 kinds of anabolic-androgenic
steroids — the infamous ’roids used and abused to promote muscle growth — but
they are all synthetic compounds mimicking testosterone’s chemical structure.
16. There is some correlation between aggressive behavior and
testosterone levels, but most research lacks evidence of causation, and some
results are contradictory.
17. One study found higher levels of testosterone correlated
with aggressive behavior in 12- and 13-year-old boys, but not in 15- and
16-year-old boys. Studies on nonhumans have found much stronger correlations
between aggression and testosterone levels.
18. The impact and timing of testosterone production varies
greatly among species. For humans, testosterone production kicks in prenatally
to differentiate the sexes, but production of testosterone in rats ramps up
only after birth.
19. There’s scant evidence to support “natural” testosterone
boosters: Elk antler velvet had no lasting effect on T levels, but royal jelly
worked wonders — on hamsters.
20. Mixed research results aren’t slowing the testosterone
booster bandwagon. In 2013, 25 percent of individuals taking it started
treatment without bothering to get a blood test to see if they actually had low
T, according to the FDA.
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