运动训练压力导致的生殖功能障碍不分性别:运动性性腺机能减退的男性状况"。

Journal of endocrinology and diabetes Pub Date : 2014-01-01 Epub Date: 2014-05-30 DOI:10.15226/2374-6890/1/2/00108
Amy R Lane, Anthony C Hackney
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引用次数: 0

摘要

调查研究表明,参加运动训练会对男性的生殖荷尔蒙状况产生重大不利影响。具体来说,长期参加耐力运动训练的男性会表现出基础(静止状态)游离睾酮和总睾酮浓度持续降低,而 LH 不会同时升高。出现这些症状的男性被认为是 "运动性性腺功能亢进男性症"(EHMC)。导致这些男性睾酮减少的确切生理机制目前尚不清楚,但推测可能是下丘脑-垂体-性腺调节轴功能紊乱所致。EHMC男性体内睾酮浓度的降低有可能对某些依赖于睾酮的合成代谢和雄激素生理过程造成破坏和损害。研究结果虽然有限,但表明在某些情况下可能存在精子发生问题;因此,这类男性不育的风险是一个关键问题。目前的证据表明,EHMC 病症仅限于长期从事慢性耐力运动训练的男性,因此发病率并不高。尽管如此,内分泌科和不孕不育科的临床医生必须进一步认识到 EHMC 的存在,并将其作为男性运动患者的一个潜在诊断问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reproductive Dysfunction from the Stress of Exercise Training is not Gender Specific: The "Exercise-Hypogonadal Male Condition".

Investigative studies point to participation in exercise training as having significant detrimental effects upon reproductive hormonal profiles in men. Specifically, men chronically exposed to training for endurance sports exhibit persistently reduced basal (resting-state) free and total testosterone concentrations without concurrent LH elevations. Men displaying these symptoms have been deemed to exhibit the "Exercise-Hypogonadal Male Condition" (EHMC). The exact physiological mechanism inducing the reduction of testosterone in these men is currently unclear, but is postulated to be a dysfunction within the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal regulatory axis. The potential exists for the reduced testosterone concentrations within EHMC men to be disruptive and detrimental to some anabolic-androgenic testosterone-dependent physiological processes. Findings, while limited, suggest spermatogenesis problems may exist in some cases; thus, infertility risk in such men is a critical concern. Present evidence suggests the EHMC condition is limited to men who have been persistently involved in chronic endurance exercise training for an extended period of time, and thus is not a highly prevalent occurrence. Nevertheless, it is critical that endocrinologist and fertility clinicians become more aware of the existence of EHMC as a potential problem-diagnosis in their male patients who exercise.

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