Are you suffering from decreased sex
drive or inability to sustain erection? Then you may be suffering from
male menopause, otherwise called Andropause. You probably thought
menopause was something women went through when they reached the age of
50, didn’t you? Well, apparently, men go through it too. But Andropause,
unlike the female menopause, which is related to female reproductive
function, affects male sexual function instead.
Other symptoms of Andropause are erectile
dysfunction, decreased libido, mood disturbance including depression,
irritability, feeling tired, loss of muscle size and strength,
osteoporosis, increased body fat, difficulty with concentration, memory
loss and difficulty sleeping.
Indeed, 44 per cent of men aged 30 to 70
suffer from erectile dysfunction (when a man has trouble getting or
keeping an erection).
Continue reading after the cut...
Continue reading after the cut...
The word ‘andropause’ is formed by
combining two Greek words — andro (male) and pause (stop). Men suffering
from andropause may well feel that their manliness has, indeed, stopped
or declined. Although medical practitioners have studied andropause
since the 1940s, it is still a controversy, and many men still deny its
existence. However, it is becoming more widely accepted in the
scientific world as something that does indeed happen to men as they
age.
It is described as “puberty in reverse”
by Jed Diamond, a California psychotherapist and author of Male
Menopause. “Like puberty, andropause wreaks “hormonal, psychological,
interpersonal, social, sexual and spiritual changes in ageing men; just
as puberty does for teenage youths,” Diamond writes.
According to researchers in the
Department of Urology, Queens University, Kingston General Hospital,
Ontario, Canada, andropause happens to one in 200 Canadian men. A study
conducted in 2003 by Dr. A. Festus and others of the University of Ife
in Nigeria, found that 44 per cent of men aged 30 to 70 suffer from
erectile dysfunction; and out of these, eight per cent was severe and 36
per cent moderate.
Needless to say, the researchers found
that the incidence of erectile dysfunction increased as men got older
from 38.5 per cent for men aged 31-40 years to 64 per cent for the older
age group of 61-79 years.
Of social significance is that the
researchers found that most men deny the existence of andropause.
Thirty-nine per cent regard it as a myth, while another 24 per cent
attribute it to various non-scientific causes which they usually blame
on their wives.
They, therefore, use this excuse to look
for younger partners, only to discover that the problem has not gone
away. They may stop looking for younger partners, but the denial of its
existence and not realising that andropause has a medical foundation
stops men from seeking appropriate medical help.
Andropause is due to changing hormone
level in men, which progressively declines with age. Andropause is
characterised by loss of testosterone, the hormone that makes men act
like men. Most men’s testosterone levels drop as they age. However, some
men are affected more than others are. The rate of decline varies from
individual to individual.
The loss of testosterone, which can
happen to men as young as 35, is gradual, with testosterone levels
dropping by one per cent to 1.55 per cent annually starting at about age
30. Testosterone level drops by about 10 per cent every 10 years. At
the same time, another hormone in the body, called Sex Binding Hormone
Globulin or SBHG, traps much of the testosterone that is still
circulating around the system and makes it unavailable to the body’s
tissues to make them function properly.
The testosterone that is remaining to
assist the tissues to function as they should is called “bioavailable
testosterone levels.” Every man experiences a decline of bioavailable
testosterone, but some men’s levels dip lower than others. It is
estimated that 30 per cent of men in their 50s will have testosterone
levels low enough to cause andropause symptoms.
Testosterone is one of the hormones
forming the androgen panel or making hormones. According to the World
Health Organisation, total androgen levels — not just testosterone —
also affect male andropause as these hormones decline as men age. The
WHO study found that androgen levels of men aged 70 were only 10 per
cent of that of men of 25 years. For this reason, some have described
andropause as ADAM (Androgen Deficiency of the Ageing Male).
To be concluded
-Oladapo Ashiru/Punch
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