| Literature DB >> 23606790 |
Stella Vodo1, Nicoletta Bechi, Anna Petroni, Carolina Muscoli, Anna Maria Aloisi.
Abstract
Chronic pain has to be considered in all respects a debilitating disease and 10-20% of the world's adult population is affected by this disease. In the most general terms, pain is symptomatic of some form of dysfunction and (often) the resulting inflammatory processes in the body. In the study of pain, great attention has been paid to the possible involvement of gonadal hormones, especially in recent years. In particular, testosterone, the main androgen, is thought to play a beneficial, protective role in the body. Other important elements to be related to pain, inflammation, and hormones are lipids, heterogenic molecules whose altered metabolism is often accompanied by the release of interleukins, and lipid-derived proinflammatory mediators. Here we report data on interactions often not considered in chronic pain mechanisms.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23606790 PMCID: PMC3628213 DOI: 10.1155/2013/183041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Hormone levels commonly recorded in adult men and women. In females, the high variability of estradiol concentration is due to the menstrual cycle variations. Note that testosterone is expressed in ng/mL and estradiol in pg/mL (1 ng = 1000 pg).
| Hormones | Adult men | Adult women |
|---|---|---|
| Testosterone (ng/mL) | 3–8 | 0.5–1 |
| Estradiol (pg/mL) | <50 | 20–400 |
| Estriol (mg/dL) | <2 | <2 |
| Estrone (pg/mL) | 15–65 | Pre-menopausal: 15–200 |
| Post-menopausal: 15–55 | ||
| Androstenedione ng/dL | 50–220 | 30–285 |
| SHBG nmol/L | 14–71 | 20–155 |
| DHEA ng/dL | 180–1250 | 130–980 |
| DHEA-Sulfate | 10–619 | Pre-menopausal: 12–535 |
| Post-menopausal: 30–260 |