Seasonal and circadian variation in salivary testosterone in rural Bolivian men
Fecha
2009-02-19Autor
Vitzthum, Virginia J
Worthman, Carol M
Beall, Cynthia M
Thornburg, Jonathan
Vargas, Enrique
Villena, Mercedes
Soria Sánchez, Rudy
Cáceres, Esperanza
Spielvogel, Hilde
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemResumen
Abstract.
Testosterone (T) plays a key role in the increase and maintenance of muscle mass and bone density in
adult men. Life history theory predicts that environmental stress may prompt a reallocation of such investments to
those functions critical to survival. We tested this hypothesis in two studies of rural Bolivian adult men by comparing
free T levels and circadian rhythms during late winter, which is especially severe, to those in less arduous seasons. For each pair of salivary TAM/TPM samples (collected in a 12-h period), circadian rhythm was considered classic (CCLASSIC)
if TAM > 110%TPM, reverse (CREVERSE) if TPM > 110%TAM, and flat (CFLAT) otherwise. We tested the hypotheses that
mean TAM > mean TPM and that mean TLW < mean TOTHER (LW 5 late winter, OTHER 5 other seasons). In Study A,
of 115 TPM–TAM pairs, 51% 5 CCLASSIC, 39% 5 CREVERSE, 10% 5 CFLAT; in Study B, of 184 TAM–TPM pairs, 55% 5
CCLASSIC, 33% 5 CREVERSE, 12% 5 CFLAT. Based on fitting linear mixed models, in both studies TOTHER-AM > TOTHER-PM
(A: P 5 0.035, B: P 5 0.0005) and TOTHER-AM > TLW-AM (A: P 5 0.054, B: P 5 0.007); TPM did not vary seasonally, and T
diurnality was not significant during late winter. T diurnality varied substantially between days within an individual,
between individuals and between seasons, but neither T levels nor diurnality varied with age. These patterns may
reflect the seasonally varying but unscheduled, life-long, strenuous physical labor that typifies many non-industrialized
economies. These results also suggest that single morning samples may substantially underestimate peak circulating T
for an individual and, most importantly, that exogenous signals may moderate diurnality and the trajectory of agerelated change in the male gonadal axis.