1. Circulating Estrogen Levels and Self-Reported Health and Mobility Limitation in Community-Dwelling Men of the Framingham Heart Study.
- Author
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Jasuja, Guneet Kaur, Travison, Thomas G., Murabito, Joanne M., Davda, Maithili N., Rose, Adam J., Basaria, Shehzad, Coviello, Andrea, Vasan, Ramachandran S., D'Agostino, Ralph, and Bhasin, Shalender
- Subjects
ESTROGEN ,MEN'S health ,ESTRONE ,ESTRADIOL ,PHYSICAL activity ,LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry ,WALKING speed ,GRIP strength ,GERIATRIC assessment ,AGING ,SELF-evaluation ,STATISTICS ,STEROIDS ,SYMPTOMS ,HEALTH equity ,INDEPENDENT living ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: Self-rated health is a commonly used global indicator of health status. Few studies have examined the association of self-rated health and mobility with estrone and estradiol in men. Accordingly, we determined the cross-sectional, incident, and mediating relations between circulating estrone and estradiol levels with self-rated health, mobility limitation, and physical performance in community-dwelling men.Methods: The cross-sectional sample included 1,148 men, who attended Framingham Offspring Study Examinations 7 and 8. Estrone and estradiol levels were measured using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry at Examination 7. Self-reported mobility limitation and self-rated health were assessed at Examinations 7 and 8. Additionally, short physical performance battery, usual walking speed, and grip strength were assessed at Examination 7.Results: In incident analysis, estradiol levels at Examination 7 were associated with increased odds of fair or poor self-rated health at Examination 8, after adjusting for age, body mass index, comorbidities, and testosterone levels; in an individual with 50% greater estradiol than other, the odds of reporting "fair or poor" self-rated health increased by 1.78 (95% confidence interval: 1.25-2.55; p = .001). Neither estrone nor estradiol levels were associated with any physical performance measure at baseline.Conclusions: Higher circulating levels of estradiol are associated with increased risk of incident fair/poor self-rated health in community-dwelling men. The mechanisms by which circulating levels of estradiol are related to self-rated health in men need further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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