Document type

Article

Version

Published version

Publication date

Publication license

cc-by (c) Alemany, Marià, 1946-, 2012
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/53160

Do the interactions between glucocorticoids and sex hormones regulate the development of the metabolic syndrome?

Journal Title

Director/Tutor

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

The metabolic syndrome is basically a maturity-onset disease. Typically, its manifestations begin to flourish years after the initial dietary or environmental aggression began. Since most hormonal, metabolic, or defense responses are practically immediate, the procrastinated response do not seem justified. Only in childhood, the damages of the metabolic syndrome appear with minimal delay. Sex affects the incidence of the metabolic syndrome, but this is more an effect of timing than absolute gender differences, females holding better than males up to menopause, when the differences between sexes tend to disappear. The metabolic syndrome is related to an immune response, countered by a permanent increase in glucocorticoids, which keep the immune system at bay but also induce insulin resistance, alter the lipid metabolism, favor fat deposition, mobilize protein, and decrease androgen synthesis. Androgens limit the operation of glucocorticoids, which is also partly blocked by estrogens, since they decrease inflammation (which enhances glucocorticoid release). These facts suggest that the appearance of the metabolic syndrome symptoms depends on the strength (i.e., levels) of androgens and estrogens. The predominance of glucocorticoids and the full manifestation of the syndrome in men are favored by decreased androgen activity. Low androgens can be found in infancy, maturity, advanced age, or because of their inhibition by glucocorticoids (inflammation, stress, medical treatment). Estrogens decrease inflammation and reduce the glucocorticoid response. Low estrogen (infancy, menopause) again allow the predominance of glucocorticoids and the manifestation of the metabolic syndrome. It is postulated that the equilibrium between sex hormones and glucocorticoids may be a critical element in the timing of the manifestation of metabolic syndrome-related pathologies.

Citation

Citation

ALEMANY, Marià. Do the interactions between glucocorticoids and sex hormones regulate the development of the metabolic syndrome?. Frontiers in Endocrinology. 2012. Vol. 3, num. 27. ISSN 1664-2392. [consulted: 7 of June of 2026]. Available at: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/53160

Export metadata

JSON - METS

Share record