L12 - Endocrinology of Ageing Flashcards

1
Q

Associations and Causations of hypogonadism / growth hormone deficiency / ageing

A

-fat mass, ­visceral fat
-Sarcopaenia
¯decr Bone mineral density
¯decr QOL / mood
­-risk cardiovascular disease

‘Phenotypes’ are: Non-specific, High prevalence

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2
Q

Ageing: nutritional status

how does weight change (+from when)

lean body mass change
(+from when)

how does the diet change

A

WEIGHT
↑ from mid-30s
→ 50 – 70

LEAN BODY MASS
↓ 6-8% / decade from mid-30s
DIET
Trend towards ↓ intake total energy & protein with ↑ age

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3
Q

Ageing: insulin and glucose

how does it change

A

↑ [insulin] and [glucose] with ↑ age
↑ insulin resistance
↓ peripheral glucose uptake

↑ prevalence metabolic syndrome with ↑ age

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4
Q

What is metabolic syndrome and what does it include

what is the underlying mechanism caused by

A

Constellation of closely associated CV risk factors
Visceral obesity, dyslipidaemia, hyperglycaemia, hypertension

Insulin resistance is the underlying pathophysiological mechanism

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5
Q

Ageing: Menopause

what causes it

symptoms

morbidities associated with it

A

CAUSE
ovarian failure. oestrogen levels stay very low post menopause. ↓E2, ↑LH / FSH

50 years: hot flushes, night sweats, median duration of menopausal symptoms 7 years

morbidity
↑ osteoporosis, ↑ CHD, ↑ sexual dysfunction

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6
Q

Post menopausal HRT

observational studies

A

obs studies showed benefits - BUT healthy user bias. risks as well.

risk: benefit ratio depends on
Other risk factors
Age of women and duration of HRT use
Greater risk if >60 years, >10 year post MP
Type of HRT (oestrogen, progestogen, route)

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7
Q

Post menopausal HRT

benefits and risks

A

BENEFITS: Decreases osteoporosis / fracture risk, for duration Rx

RISKS: 
↑ venous thrombo-embolism 
↑ breast Ca (small) 
esp > 5 years  
↑ endometrial Ca 
if use unopposed E2
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8
Q

Male gonadal axis and age

what happens

A

gradual decr of Testosterone with age

decrease in sexual function

increase in osteoporosis

decrease in muscle strength

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9
Q

Testosterone treatment

what can it do?

A

Bones: can increase bone mineral density if hypogonadal. bisphosphonates work independant of androgen status

Body composition: incr lean body mass, decr fat mass

increases muscle strength with supraphysiological doses

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10
Q

Testosterone treatment:

benefits and risk and apprasial

A

Little benefit. no evidence for.

Sexual function: most erectile dysfunction is atherosclerotic.
Cognitive function
Mood / QoL

RISKS
Prostate (benign prostatic hypertrophy / cancer)
Erythropoeisis (­haematocrit)
? Cardiovascular risk ?

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11
Q

GH-IGF-I axis and age

A

decr integrated [GH] with incr­ age; decr [IGF-I] with age

Wide variation in ‘normal range’

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12
Q

GH treatment

what are the effects

what are the risks

A

Body:
incr lean body mass
incr fat mass

BUT not convincing functional benefits found. no sig change in bone mineral density and lipids.

RISKS
incr non smoking related cancer risk
incr T2 DM risk
—-soft tissue oedema, arthralgias, carpal tunnel syndrome

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13
Q

Cortisol and age

how? (what is the overall principle of this)

A

↑ trough levels cortisol with age

↑ in average levels with age

Phase advance of dirurnal rhythm: time at trough and peak both earlier

Increase in cortisol associated with an increased decline in cognitive function. Because less hippocampal glucocorticoid receptors and less sensitivity to glucocorticoid receptors.
More glucocorticoids leads to hippocampal neurones vulnerable to damage. Decreases hippo vol.

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14
Q

DHEA and age: how does it change

how is it regulated and acts

how important is it

A

declines with age

ACTH regulates
action via androgen / oestrogen release

for men, much more potent androgens - modest androgenic effect at best

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15
Q

DHEA observational studies.

what have they shown and is it relevant?

evidence?

A

incr in DHEA associated with

↑QOL, ↑bone mineral density,

↓cognitive decline, ↓ coronary heart disease

BUT ↓[DHEA] is a non-specific marker of ill health

- Associations may not be not causal
- ↓[DHEA] / ↓ [DHEA]:cortisol ratio found in cancer, inflammatory diseases, T2DM, CV disease

no evidence of beneficial effects in Body composition, physical performance, insulin sensitivity, QOL

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16
Q

Thyroid function and age

what happens with T3 and T4 with age

T4 treatment? evidence? is it beneficial>

A

slight incr of TSH with age

decr in peripheral T4 to T3 conversion with age. decr in T3 with age.

No evidence for T4 beneficial effect

may do harm - incr risk of osteoporosis, atrial fibrilation. risk in elderly with atherosclerotic coronaries

17
Q

Starvation / Anorexia Nervosa

what happens and changes hormone wise

A

incr insulin, decr glucose, incr insulin sensitivity

LEPTIN
— Produced by white adipose tissue
• [leptin] correlates with BMI and body fat
— Reports nutritional information to the
hypothalamus

‘Starvation signal’: signals energy availability
• decr [leptin] –> incr food intake, decr energy expenditure,
‘decr l[leptin] —> decr fertility
— Permissive factor for initiation of puberty

also oestrogen / testosterone
decr LH, FSH, oestrogen /
testosterone

18
Q

Starvation / Anorexia Nervosa

what happens and changes hormone wise, for oestrogen and testosterone

A

decr LH, FSH,
so decr in oestrogen /
testosterone

decr fertility, amenorrhoea
—‘hypothalamic
—amenorrhoea’
— makes ‘evolutionary sense’ in times of famine

Osteoporosis
—Rx HRT / COCP

19
Q

Links between metabolism and reproduction

think sp example

A

0b 0b mouse: (leptin deficient)
— Hyperphagic & obese

ALSO 
— Low gonadotrophins 
— Incomplete development of reproductive organs 
— Does not reach sexual maturity 
— Infertile 

Leptin Rx:
— Reduce obesity

ALSO
— Restore Gn secretion 
— Mature gonad 
— Induce puberty 
— Restore fertility
20
Q

Kisspeptin: a central mediator

what is it what does it do and what does it help mediate

A

A GnRH secretagogue

KISSI neurons highly responsive to oestrogen, implicated in both + and — central feedback of sex steroids on GnRH production

Metabolic influences on reproduction mediated by leptin via the kisspeptin system
— Puberty
— Reproduction

21
Q

Starvation / Anorexia Nervosa

what is its effect on the GH / IGF axis

A

‘GH resistance’
increase GH, decrease IGF-I

Seen in acute starvation and in AN

? down-regulation hepatic GH receptor
and / or post-receptor defect

Reversible with re—feeding

22
Q

Starvation / Anorexia Nervosa

what is its effect on thyroid function

A

TSH and T4 lower limit of normal

decr T4 conversion to T3 –> decr T3 (active)

incr T4 conversion to rT3 –> incr rT3 (inactive)

Consequences
— Lower basal metabolic rate
— Conserve energy