PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Adverse effects of common prostate enlargement and hair growth drugs: A review

2015-08-25
(Press-News.org) (Boston)--Twenty-five percent of men currently taking Finasteride or Dutasteride, popularly known as Proscar and Avodart, for the treatment of benign prostate enlargement (BPH), appear not to benefit from taking these medications. Those prescribed Propecia or Avodart for male pattern hair loss (known as alopecia) are also at risk for adverse events elicited by these drugs.

These findings are part of an international, collaborative review currently online in the journal Endocrine Reviews and Metabolic Disorders. Led by Abdulmaged Traish, PhD, professor of biochemistry and urology at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM), the paper summarizes current available data and the impact of these drugs on sexual function as well as insulin resistance, depression and cognitive dysfunction.

Finasteride and Dutasteride are in the family of drugs known as 5α-reductase inhibitors (5α-RIs).They function by inhibiting the conversion of testosterone to 5α-dihydrotestosterone (5α-DHT) as well as several other critical steroid hormones. By reducing the concentration of 5α-DHT in the prostate, prostate volume decreases thus improving urinary flow.

Considerable controversy exists regarding the severity and persistence of the adverse effects of 5α-RIs, but emerging clinical evidence strongly suggests that therapy is associated with sexual adverse side effects. The package insert for Finasteride reports a libido loss and/or reduction in 10 percent of patients and erectile dysfunction in 18 percent. In some patients, these effects can remain even after stopping therapy. According to the researchers the suggestion that sexual side effects appear early in the first six months of therapy and then return to baseline is inaccurate. "The mechanism of dysfunction is likely multifactorial, related both to the direct decrease in 5α-DHT and direct influence on central and peripheral nerves," explains Traish.

In addition to sexual side effects, there has been some investigation into whether 5α-RIs can be used for prostate cancer chemo-prevention, but the researchers found the data to be inconclusive. They also believe the potential for cardiovascular side effects of therapy to warrant further investigation. "Inhibition of 5α-R activity may potentiate insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, vascular disease and osteoporosis, but studies have not been definitive. The investigation into psychiatric side effects of 5α-RIs has been limited, but some case series describe increased depression and anxiety symptoms among patients on the medication," he adds.

The U.S. National Institutes of Health recently added post-finasteride syndrome (PFS) to its Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center. Specific diagnostic criteria have not yet been described for the PFS spectrum. Further studies on PFS are needed to determine any relationship between dosing and severity of long-term side effects.

The authors contend that increased education and awareness of the adverse side effects of 5α-RIs is needed among clinicians and patients alike. "There needs to be a method of distinguishing who may benefit from therapy from those who will not," said Traish.

The authors also urge that further investigation into adverse side effects of 5α-RIs is needed.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Rare nautilus sighted for the first time in 3 decades

2015-08-25
In early August, biologist Peter Ward returned from the South Pacific with news that he encountered an old friend, one he hadn't seen in over three decades. The University of Washington professor had seen what he considers one of the world's rarest animals, a remote encounter that may become even more infrequent if illegal fishing practices continue. The creature in question is Allonautilus scrobiculatus, a species of nautilus that Ward and a colleague had previously discovered off of Ndrova Island in Papua New Guinea. Nautiluses are small, distant cousins of squid and ...

Sequencing of barley genome achieves new milestone

Sequencing of barley genome achieves new milestone
2015-08-25
RIVERSIDE, Calif. - Barley, a widely grown cereal grain commonly used to make beer and other alcoholic beverages, possesses a large and highly repetitive genome that is difficult to fully sequence. Now a team led by scientists at the University of California, Riverside has reached a new milestone in its work, begun in 2000, on sequencing the barley genome. The researchers have sequenced large portions of the genome that together contain nearly two-thirds of all barley genes. The new information, published in The Plant Journal, will not only expand geneticists' knowledge ...

Allina Health study shows how palliative care can improve life for heart failure patients

2015-08-25
A recent randomized trial conducted by researchers at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, part of Allina Health, found that inpatient palliative care (PC) visits were associated with improved quality of life and symptom burden for patients with heart failure (HF). Because of these results, Abbott Northwestern conducted a new study, "A Description of Inpatient Palliative Care Actions for Patients with Acute Heart Failure," published June 30 by the American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. The study aimed to identify and describe what actions PC providers took to ...

Opioid receptor gene variations associated with neonatal abstinence syndrome severity

2015-08-25
BOSTON - A new study led by researchers at Boston Medical Center (BMC) indicates that variations in opioid receptor genes are associated with more severe neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) in newborn babies. The findings, published online in Drug & Alcohol Dependence, could help lead to the development of individualized treatment plans tailored to each infants' risk of requiring medication to curb their NAS symptoms, which could help improve these patients' outcomes and reduce how long some stay in the hospital. NAS is present in newborn babies who have been exposed ...

New Yorker cartoons reveal attitudes toward parenting

2015-08-25
Jaclyn Tabor and Jessica Calarco tap a novel data source to track changing attitudes toward parenting during the 20th and early 21st centuries: cartoons in the New Yorker magazine. "We find that portrayals of children and child-rearing are both more varied and more fluctuating than existing research would suggest," said Tabor, an Indiana University Bloomington doctoral student in sociology. "Contemporary cartoons celebrate children but also recognize the significant challenges children create for parents. Cartoons from the 1920s and 1930s -- when rates of childlessness ...

School lunch study: Visual proof kids are tossing mandated fruits and veggies in trash

School lunch study: Visual proof kids are tossing mandated fruits and veggies in trash
2015-08-25
Less than a month before Congress votes on whether to reauthorize a controversial program mandating healthier school lunches, a new study confirms the suspicions of school officials - many students are putting the fruits and vegetables they're now required to take straight into the trash, consuming fewer than they did before the law took effect. The new study, published online in Public Health Reports on Aug. 25, is the first to use digital imaging to capture students' lunch trays before and after they exited the lunch line. It is also one of the first to compare fruit ...

The catch of the day: Fishing for research data at the Museum of Science

The catch of the day: Fishing for research data at the Museum of Science
2015-08-25
People of all ages recently lined up to do some fishing at the Museum of Science in Boston. And oddly, the fish they hoped to hook were not good ones. Museum goers were invited to play "Fish Police!!" is a video game that challenged players to rid a river of its bad fish, while sparing its good ones. The catch? All the fish looked exactly alike, and could be told apart only by the way a fish puffed in size: a bad fish puffed just a little faster. After all, it was nervous that it would be caught. The game's premise may sound a little fishy, but it has helped a team ...

Mental visual imaging training improves multiple sclerosis patients' well-being

2015-08-25
Amsterdam, NL, August 25, 2015 - Patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RR-MS), the most common form of the disease, often have deficits in two neuropsychological functions, autobiographical memory (AM) and episodic future thinking (EFT), which impact quality of life. In a new study published in Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience, researchers report that training RR-MS patients in mental visual imagery (MVI) can improve AM/EFT functioning. AM facilitates the ability to remember personal detailed events within a specific location and timeframe. EFT enables ...

Predicting who will murder his wife or his family

2015-08-25
Murderers who kill intimate partners and family members have a similar profile One-third of all women murdered in U.S. are killed by male partners Wives and family members wrongly think 'my husband or son would never hurt me' CHICAGO --- Murderers who kill intimate partners and family members have a significantly different psychological and forensic profile from murderers who kill people they don't know, reports a new Northwestern Medicine study that examined the demographics, psychiatric history and neuropsychology of these individuals. The new knowledge about ...

Promising target for new drugs found in pancreatic cancer cells

Promising target for new drugs found in pancreatic cancer cells
2015-08-25
HOUSTON, August 25, 2015 - Pancreatic cancer is extremely deadly and often has a poor prognosis. Ranked as the fourth deadliest cancer in the U.S. and poised to move up within the next few years, pancreatic cancer is very difficult to detect in its early stages. Seldom diagnosed early and typically spreading rapidly, the disease has no effective treatment once it advances. University of Houston researchers are on a mission to develop drugs that will allow physicians to prolong patient survival and, possibly, even eradicate this deadliest of cancers. "Our research ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UC Irvine astronomers’ simulations support dark matter theory

Rensselaer researcher publishes groundbreaking study on labor market discrimination against transgender people

What's new in transportation data at PSU?

Ten-minute breath test to monitor antibiotic concentrations

Antimicrobial resistance prevalence varies by age and sex in bloodstream infections in European hospitals

Pathogens, including multi-drug resistant “superbugs”, found on floors, ceilings and door handles of hospital toilets, UK study finds

Sour Patch adults: 1 in 8 grown-ups love extreme tartness, study shows

Vineyard Cares Business of the Year presented to Huntsman Cancer Institute

Polyamorous youth report facing stigma, heightened levels of depression

Competition from “skinny label” generics saved Medicare billions

Xavier Ochsner College of Medicine announces founding dean and location in downtown New Orleans at Benson Tower

Three Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute faculty members honored by AAAS

STRONG STAR Consortium secures $17 million in DOD research funding for brain injuries, PTSD and more

Scientists harness the wind as a tool to move objects

Long snouts protect foxes when diving headfirst in snow

Laser imaging could offer early detection for at-risk artwork

"BioBlitz" citizen science reveals urban biodiversity, guides management

Haiti study suggests early-onset heart failure is prevalent form of heart disease in low-income countries

Maps developed with artificial intelligence confirm low levels of phosphorus in Amazonian soil

Uptick in NYC transit assault rate during COVID pandemic; has not returned to pre-pandemic levels despite subway safety plan

Hongbo Chi, PhD named 2023 AAAS Fellow

Study finds school entry requirements linked to increased HPV vaccination rates

Study reveals higher injury and assault rates among NYC food delivery gig workers dependent on the work

Kaposi sarcoma discovery could facilitate drug development

Research shows link between pollution and heart risks in residents of the city of São Paulo, Brazil

Rice’s Yousif Shamoo elected AAAS fellow

Mazin to study electronic, transport & topological properties of frustrated magnets

TCT 2024 Career Achievement Award to be presented to Robert A. Harrington, MD

Tibetan plateau had broader social dimensions than previously thought

Oncotarget sponsors 19th International p53 Workshop in Italy

[Press-News.org] Adverse effects of common prostate enlargement and hair growth drugs: A review