Keep Testosterone Levels High to Live Longer

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  • liftsiron
    Administrator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18433

    Keep Testosterone Levels High to Live Longer

    Keep Testosterone Levels High to Live Longer

    Low T is associated with a higher death rate. It also makes you fat. Here's why you should pay attention to testosterone levels.
    by TC Luoma | 11/30/15


    Testosterone plays a role in muscle size and strength, libido, energy, and keeping body fat low. You knew that, but high testosterone is also important to just plain staying alive. Contrary to what late-night TV lawyer commercials spout about high testosterone killing people, it's low testosterone that's the real concern.
    Low testosterone levels correlate strongly with:

    Higher risk of cardiovascular disease
    Narrowing of carotid arteries
    Abnormal EKG
    More frequent congestive heart failure
    Increased incidence of angina
    Increased body mass index
    Type II diabetes
    Metabolic syndrome
    Insulin resistance
    Higher death rate from all causes, including cardiac mortality

    Maybe you did a double take at the last item in the list. You should've. One study involving 858 male service veterans found that low testosterone individuals had an 88 percent greater chance of dying, for any reason, even after variables like age, other illnesses, and body mass index were accounted for.
    Don't All Lifters and Athletes Have High T?

    Are you immune to low testosterone because you're a big-time weight lifter? Nope. Male athletes often have lower testosterone than untrained men. One study found that weight lifters (along with rowers, cyclists, and swimmers) had testosterone levels that were 60-85 percent of untrained men.

    Some of the researchers attributed that disparity in alterations of hepatic (liver) and extrahepatic (muscles, skin) metabolism of testosterone that can't be compensated for by the athletes' gonads, but I suspect it might have to do with some yet-unexplained exercise-related increase in steroid hormone binding globulin (SHBG), which makes less testosterone available to tissues. Low testosterone levels seem to be epidemic among lifters. True, testosterone levels usually go up after an intense workout, but the rise is short-lived and levels often drop to below baseline soon after.

    So keep testosterone high. Use herbal testosterone boosters (we like Alpha MaleŽ), and if your levels are seriously deficient, consider physician-monitored testosterone replacement therapy.
    ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle
  • liftsiron
    Administrator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18433

    #2
    ^^^^^^
    ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle

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