Literature DB >> 19128225

The brain, the penis and steroid hormones: clinical correlates with endothelial dysfunction.

Abdulmaged M Traish1, Hilal Abu-Zahra, Andre T Guay.   

Abstract

Erectile function is a complex neurovascular process that depends on the health of the central and peripheral nervous systems and the vasculature. Thus, signaling from the central nervous system (brain) to the peripheral nervous system (penis) is critical and is modulated by a set of complex interactions that depend on cerebral and vascular circulation. The cerebral and peripheral vasculatures are target tissues for sex steroid hormones. Gonadal, adrenal and neurosteroids regulate the function and physiology of the endothelium and modulate vascular and cerebral circulation by genomic and non-genomic dependent mechanisms. Recent advances in cell and molecular biology have defined a critical role of endothelium in vascular function. A host of biochemical and clinical markers of endothelium function and dysfunction have been identified to assess vascular pathology. Emerging evidence suggests that sex steroid hormones play an important role in maintaining endothelial health and sex steroid deficiency is associated with endothelial dysfunction, vascular disease and erectile dysfunction. Such information has important clinical implications in patient management with sex steroid hormone insufficiency, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, vascular disease and erectile dysfunction. In this review, we discuss the role of sex steroid hormones in modulation of the biochemical and clinical markers associated with endothelial dysfunction. Specifically the regulation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase, asymmetric dimethylarginine, reactive oxygen species, endothelin-1, inflammatory cytokines, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, markers of cell adhesion, dysregulation of fibrinolytic factors and the inability to regenerate from endothelial progenitor cells concomitant with increased endothelial apoptosis, increased cellular permeability and increased vascular tone.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19128225     DOI: 10.2174/138161208786898699

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Pharm Des        ISSN: 1381-6128            Impact factor:   3.116


  4 in total

1.  Exercise training improves the defective centrally mediated erectile responses in rats with type I diabetes.

Authors:  Hong Zheng; William G Mayhan; Kaushik P Patel
Journal:  J Sex Med       Date:  2011-08-24       Impact factor: 3.802

Review 2.  Androgens modulate endothelial function and endothelial progenitor cells in erectile physiology.

Authors:  Abdulmaged M Traish; Artin Galoosian
Journal:  Korean J Urol       Date:  2013-11-06

3.  Differences in reproductive toxicology between alopecia drugs: an analysis on adverse events among female and male cases.

Authors:  Min Wu; Qingxiong Yu; Qingfeng Li
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-12-13

4.  Exploring Landscape of Drug-Target-Pathway-Side Effect Associations.

Authors:  Hansaim Lim; Aleksandar Poleksic; Lei Xie
Journal:  AMIA Jt Summits Transl Sci Proc       Date:  2018-05-18
  4 in total

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