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  1. #1
    Cycleon is offline AR-Hall of Famer / Retired
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    Testosterone Derided As a Health Supplement, Report Discourages Widespread Use

    Testosterone Derided As a Health Supplement
    Report Discourages Widespread Use
    By Marc Kaufman
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Thursday, November 13, 2003; Page A01


    There is no evidence that the testosterone being used by a growing number of American men to boost their strength, mood or virility is doing them any good despite the claims being made for the hormone, an expert panel of doctors concluded yesterday.

    In a major report from the congressionally chartered Institute of Medicine (IOM), the panel said testosterone is "inappropriate for wide-scale use to prevent possible future disease or to enhance strength or mood in otherwise healthy older men." The Food and Drug Administration has approved its use only for men with a particular medical condition, but many more have sought it.

    Testosterone was prescribed for more than 800,000 men last year, the panel found, including many who believe it can help them build muscle, sharpen their thinking, increase their libido and slow aging. But the IOM panel concluded that there is insufficient research to document these benefits in otherwise healthy men, or to gauge the magnitude of known increased risks of prostate cancer and blood clotting.

    "For men whose testosterone is already in the normal range, there is no proof that it makes them better in any way," said panel member Deborah Grady of the University of California at San Francisco. "If there is no proven benefit for them, they shouldn't be taking testosterone no matter what the risk."

    Although women undergo a sudden decline in the female sex hormone estrogen during menopause, most men experience a gradual tapering off in testosterone production that begins in their forties and continues at about 1 percent a year. That decline, sometimes referred to as "andropause ," is the subject of medical debate, with some researchers saying it is predictable and normal and others saying it is associated with diseases and conditions that can be kept at bay by taking additional testosterone.

    The FDA has approved testosterone only for hypogonadism, a steep decline in hormone production triggered by surgery or disease that harms the testes or pituitary gland. But the IOM panel concluded that a significant majority of the more than 1.75 million testosterone prescriptions in 2002 were for men who did not have the condition. Once the FDA has approved a drug for one condition, doctors can legally prescribe it for any medical purpose. Such "off-label" uses are widespread -- and sometimes controversial.

    The sharp increase in testosterone use since 1999 coincided with the FDA's approval of new and easier ways to administer the drug. Testosterone used to be given only by monthly injections, but men can now get it as a patch or a gel. Because of the way testosterone acts in the body, it is not given in pill form in the United States.

    The panel, which the National Institute on Aging and the National Cancer Institute asked to review the issue, called for a series of small studies to determine whether the hormone can help men cope with some of the predictable effects of aging. It said the studies, which have been on hold while the IOM studied the issue, should not include younger men because they were expected to receive less benefit for the same risks.

    At several points in its report, the panel referred to the dramatic turnaround among researchers and doctors regarding the usefulness and safety of estrogen therapy for post-menopausal women. The hormone had been widely prescribed to reduce the physical discomforts that can accompany menopause and to potentially improve the long-term health of older women until a major federal study found last year that the risks of estrogen outweigh the limited benefits. As a result, usage has plummeted.

    But even as the medical consensus on estrogen was changing sharply, men were increasingly asking doctors for testosterone. The IOM study reported that the number of men taking it more than doubled between 1999 and 2002, and the number of prescriptions almost tripled. Panel Chairman Dan G. Blazer of Duke University Medical Center said the number of men taking the drug has continued to increase sharply, with more than 2 million prescriptions expected this year.

    Some of the increase has been driven by aggressive advertising, much of which holds out the hope of the very benefits that the report said have never been confirmed by rigorous clinical trials. On the Web site for the market leader AndroGel , for instance, manufacturer Solvay Pharmaceuticals asks: "Fatigued? Depressed mood? Low sex drive? Could be your testosterone is running on empty."

    Gabrielle Braswell, spokeswoman for Solvay, said the company is pleased by the IOM recommendation for more study and did not quarrel with the panel's concerns about broad testosterone use. "We believe it is appropriate to use [AndroGel] for the conditions approved by the FDA," she said.

    Blazer said that his group was not urging doctors to stop prescribing testosterone off-label for otherwise healthy men, but that physicians and their patients need to "be thinking more carefully about its use."

    William Hazzard, a professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine, said the testosterone issue is becoming increasingly important with the aging of the baby-boom generation. "We're concerned that a population-based drive to increase testosterone use could be trumping science at this instance," he said.

    In a statement, the National Institute on Aging said it would consider conducting new studies. The statement added that "although some older men who have tried these treatments report feeling 'more energetic' or 'younger,' testosterone therapy remains a scientifically unproven method for preventing or relieving any physical or psychological changes that men with normal testosterone levels may experience as they get older."

    Some doctors, however, said the report seems to miss the fact that testosterone has been beneficial to many men. "There is a disconnect between some of the conclusions and recommendations that come out of this, and what I and other doctors see in clinical practice," said Abraham Morgentaler, a professor at Harvard Medical School.

    Yes, we all know that testosterone doesnt build muscle

  2. #2
    mass junkie's Avatar
    mass junkie is offline banned
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    Hence my signature

  3. #3
    BUYLONGTERM's Avatar
    BUYLONGTERM is offline Anabolic Member
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    Nice call Mass.

    Hell, I've living proof Testosterone works. I feel alive, more energetic, better sexy drive, I think clearly, the list goes on and on.....

    I want to know who this "Panel" works for. I mean, god forbid if they came out saying how wonderful Test is. BULLSHIT liars, thats what they are!!!!!
    Last edited by buylongterm; 11-13-2003 at 10:42 PM.

  4. #4
    Jeff1's Avatar
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    Me too i love test It makes me feel like superman lol I love the shit =)

  5. #5
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    echobeach is offline Junior Member
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    Geez, I must be imagining the those extra blue plates I'm putting on the ends of the bar...

    Perhaps I'm dreaming that I'm rooting three times a day...

    And for sure I've gotta be wrong about the extra drive at training...

    Damn, I thought the test was really helping too!!

    Ah well, there's always good old creatine I spose'...

  6. #6
    RON's Avatar
    RON
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    Maybe I'm not seeing this right but were all the people who were aginst men getting Test Women. What the hell do they know about men and our testerone . What would Deborah Grady know about how it feels to have low testosterone . Do I try to say no women should need thier estro shots after menopause.

  7. #7
    Bound for Muscle's Avatar
    Bound for Muscle is offline Associate Member
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    Quote Originally Posted by RON
    Maybe I'm not seeing this right but were all the people who were aginst men getting Test Women. What the hell do they know about men and our testerone. What would Deborah Grady know about how it feels to have low testosterone. Do I try to say no women should need thier estro shots after menopause.

    actually, women don't, those HRT estro shots cause cancer, remember?

  8. #8
    RON's Avatar
    RON
    RON is offline Anabolic Member
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bound for Muscle
    actually, women don't, those HRT estro shots cause cancer, remember?
    Yea it does. Now just bring it to washington and will outlaw it. ...On the otherhand My mother gets estro shots and if she doesn't get them she can be a real *(&#$3 well a not so nice mother. I couldn't do that to her

  9. #9
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    RussianVodka is offline Senior Member
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    My body is my business. I don't care what politicans think about it. If I want to be big and healthy I'll do AAS. I do not belive doctors who know nothing about roids.

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