Literature DB >> 24796931

Sex steroids in relation to sexual and skeletal maturation in obese male adolescents.

S Vandewalle1, Y Taes, T Fiers, M Van Helvoirt, P Debode, N Herregods, C Ernst, E Van Caenegem, I Roggen, F Verhelle, J De Schepper, J M Kaufman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Childhood obesity is associated with an accelerated skeletal maturation. However, data concerning pubertal development and sex steroid levels in obese adolescents are scarce and contrasting.
OBJECTIVES: To study sex steroids in relation to sexual and skeletal maturation and to serum prostate specific antigen (PSA), as a marker of androgen activity, in obese boys from early to late adolescence.
METHODS: Ninety obese boys (aged 10-19 y) at the start of a residential obesity treatment program and 90 age-matched controls were studied cross-sectionally. Pubertal status was assessed according to the Tanner method. Skeletal age was determined by an x-ray of the left hand. Morning concentrations of total testosterone (TT) and estradiol (E2) were measured by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, free T (FT) was measured by equilibrium dialysis, and LH, FSH, SHBG, and PSA were measured by immunoassays.
RESULTS: Genital staging was comparable between the obese and nonobese groups, whereas skeletal bone advancement (mean, 1 y) was present in early and midadolescence in the obese males. Although both median SHBG and TT concentrations were significantly (P < .001) lower in obese subjects during mid and late puberty, median FT, LH, FSH, and PSA levels were comparable to those of controls. In contrast, serum E2 concentrations were significantly (P < .001) higher in the obese group at all pubertal stages.
CONCLUSION: Obese boys have lower circulating SHBG and TT, but similar FT concentrations during mid and late puberty in parallel with a normal pubertal progression and serum PSA levels. Our data indicate that in obese boys, serum FT concentration is a better marker of androgen activity than TT. On the other hand, skeletal maturation and E2 were increased from the beginning of puberty, suggesting a significant contribution of hyperestrogenemia in the advancement of skeletal maturation in obese boys.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24796931     DOI: 10.1210/jc.2014-1452

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab        ISSN: 0021-972X            Impact factor:   5.958


  21 in total

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5.  The impact of excess body fat on bone remodeling in adolescents.

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6.  Sex Differences in Effects of Obesity on Reproductive Hormones and Glucose Metabolism in Early Puberty.

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7.  In early pubertal boys, testosterone and LH are associated with improved anti-oxidation during an aerobic exercise bout.

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