Disease | hypogonadism |
Symptom | C0029456|osteoporosis |
Sentences | 7 |
PubMedID- 24008608 | In fact, both in women and men, osteoporosis is often associated with e hypogonadism as well as with individual traits such as genetic constitution, cytokines, sex and race, which represent non-modifiable endogenous risk factors. |
PubMedID- 24468754 | Summary: although male hypogonadism is associated with osteoporosis, estradiol is likely to be the more important hormone for bone health. |
PubMedID- 23587643 | In practice, in a male patient with osteoporosis, a diagnosis of marked and persistent hypogonadism requires investigations for treatable causes. |
PubMedID- 24142635 | It might be due in part to a man's greater bone size, greater body mass, greater accrual of bone during growth, absence of a clear decrease in endogenous sex hormones as seen in menopause, and shorter average life span compared with women.1 however, it is frequent in men with secondary osteoporosis due to hypogonadism, glucocorticoid excess, alcoholism, hypercalciuria, malabsorption and hyperthyroidism. |
PubMedID- 21298272 | Purpose: management of hypogonadism-induced osteoporosis in elderly men is still a challenge. |
PubMedID- 22013547 | One of the more closely studied populations with secondary osteoporosis due to hypogonadism is prostate cancer survivors who have been treated with androgen deprivation therapy (adt). |
PubMedID- 20024529 | This may reflect secondary osteoporosis in men (due to alcohol or hypogonadism). |
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