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ODP265 Bph, Androgenic Alopecia, and Acne - Markers of Progesterone Deficiency

MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study at this stage involves 6 male patients from 21 to 50 years with the diagnosis: BPH. Androgenic alopecia. Acne disease. All patients were examined for vitamin D in the blood by calcidiol 25(OH)D using mass spectrometry and steroid hormone levelsusing a steroid profile...

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Autores principales: Kalinchenko, Svetlana, Nikiforov, Igor, Samburskaya, Olga
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9627714/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.897
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author Kalinchenko, Svetlana
Nikiforov, Igor
Samburskaya, Olga
author_facet Kalinchenko, Svetlana
Nikiforov, Igor
Samburskaya, Olga
author_sort Kalinchenko, Svetlana
collection PubMed
description MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study at this stage involves 6 male patients from 21 to 50 years with the diagnosis: BPH. Androgenic alopecia. Acne disease. All patients were examined for vitamin D in the blood by calcidiol 25(OH)D using mass spectrometry and steroid hormone levelsusing a steroid profile in saliva by mass spectrometry. Findings. Vitamin D level in three patients was below 30 ng/ml, in three patients - below 20 ng/ml. The steroid profile in the saliva of all six patients revealed progesterone deficiency, with normal testosterone levels. Patients were prescribed vitamin D in a dose of 20,000 IU daily and progesterone in a dose of 100 mg daily; patients with acne were additionally prescribed topical treatment - progesterone in gel form. As a result, after 6 months of using this therapy, patients have a cessation of hair loss, growth of downy hair and transition of downy hair to terminal hair,improvement in all patients was 80-90%. Two patients with the papulopustular form of moderate acne improved by 90%, a patient with the conglobate form improved by 50% (transition to the papulopustular form of moderate severity). Improvement of clinical picture of symptoms of BPH is also noted: decrease of IPSS questionnaire score to 7-9. Vitamin D level from 70 to 100 ng/ml. On the steroid profile of saliva, the levels of testosterone and progesterone are within normal limits. Interpretation. The main cause of androgenetic alopecia, acne, BPH is thought to be: an excess of DHT (dihydrotestosterone), increased activity of 5-α-reductase enzyme. These three diseases accompany each other. The main drug which is used 5-α-reductase blockers. The side effects of which greatly exceed the benefitsof treating. Vitamin D is involved in regulation of proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis of keratinocytes, regulation of skin immunity, regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines, stimulation of the expression of antimicrobial peptides, regulation of the integrity and permeability of the lipid barrier, reducing the severity of systemic inflammation, regulation of cellular, humoral, congenital and acquired immunity. Also, in an in vitro study it was found that progesterone can inhibit the activity of 5-α-reductase, so in the skin the activity of this enzyme is reduced by 97±5.3%. And the positive effect was also established in the treatment of prostate diseases, inhibiting 5-α-reductase, progesterone reduces the growth of the prostate gland and the growth of prostate cancer cells. CONCLUSION: Laboratory studies have shown vitamin D and progesterone deficiencies in patients with these diseases. Correction of these deficiencies resulted in improvement both in BPH (reduction of clinical manifestations) and in androgenic alopecia (cessation of hair loss and restoration of terminal hair growth) and acne (significant reduction of inflammation). Presentation: No date and time listed
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spelling pubmed-96277142022-11-04 ODP265 Bph, Androgenic Alopecia, and Acne - Markers of Progesterone Deficiency Kalinchenko, Svetlana Nikiforov, Igor Samburskaya, Olga J Endocr Soc Endocrine Disruption MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study at this stage involves 6 male patients from 21 to 50 years with the diagnosis: BPH. Androgenic alopecia. Acne disease. All patients were examined for vitamin D in the blood by calcidiol 25(OH)D using mass spectrometry and steroid hormone levelsusing a steroid profile in saliva by mass spectrometry. Findings. Vitamin D level in three patients was below 30 ng/ml, in three patients - below 20 ng/ml. The steroid profile in the saliva of all six patients revealed progesterone deficiency, with normal testosterone levels. Patients were prescribed vitamin D in a dose of 20,000 IU daily and progesterone in a dose of 100 mg daily; patients with acne were additionally prescribed topical treatment - progesterone in gel form. As a result, after 6 months of using this therapy, patients have a cessation of hair loss, growth of downy hair and transition of downy hair to terminal hair,improvement in all patients was 80-90%. Two patients with the papulopustular form of moderate acne improved by 90%, a patient with the conglobate form improved by 50% (transition to the papulopustular form of moderate severity). Improvement of clinical picture of symptoms of BPH is also noted: decrease of IPSS questionnaire score to 7-9. Vitamin D level from 70 to 100 ng/ml. On the steroid profile of saliva, the levels of testosterone and progesterone are within normal limits. Interpretation. The main cause of androgenetic alopecia, acne, BPH is thought to be: an excess of DHT (dihydrotestosterone), increased activity of 5-α-reductase enzyme. These three diseases accompany each other. The main drug which is used 5-α-reductase blockers. The side effects of which greatly exceed the benefitsof treating. Vitamin D is involved in regulation of proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis of keratinocytes, regulation of skin immunity, regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines, stimulation of the expression of antimicrobial peptides, regulation of the integrity and permeability of the lipid barrier, reducing the severity of systemic inflammation, regulation of cellular, humoral, congenital and acquired immunity. Also, in an in vitro study it was found that progesterone can inhibit the activity of 5-α-reductase, so in the skin the activity of this enzyme is reduced by 97±5.3%. And the positive effect was also established in the treatment of prostate diseases, inhibiting 5-α-reductase, progesterone reduces the growth of the prostate gland and the growth of prostate cancer cells. CONCLUSION: Laboratory studies have shown vitamin D and progesterone deficiencies in patients with these diseases. Correction of these deficiencies resulted in improvement both in BPH (reduction of clinical manifestations) and in androgenic alopecia (cessation of hair loss and restoration of terminal hair growth) and acne (significant reduction of inflammation). Presentation: No date and time listed Oxford University Press 2022-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9627714/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.897 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Endocrine Disruption
Kalinchenko, Svetlana
Nikiforov, Igor
Samburskaya, Olga
ODP265 Bph, Androgenic Alopecia, and Acne - Markers of Progesterone Deficiency
title ODP265 Bph, Androgenic Alopecia, and Acne - Markers of Progesterone Deficiency
title_full ODP265 Bph, Androgenic Alopecia, and Acne - Markers of Progesterone Deficiency
title_fullStr ODP265 Bph, Androgenic Alopecia, and Acne - Markers of Progesterone Deficiency
title_full_unstemmed ODP265 Bph, Androgenic Alopecia, and Acne - Markers of Progesterone Deficiency
title_short ODP265 Bph, Androgenic Alopecia, and Acne - Markers of Progesterone Deficiency
title_sort odp265 bph, androgenic alopecia, and acne - markers of progesterone deficiency
topic Endocrine Disruption
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9627714/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.897
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