Page 11 - The DHEA Debate - Life Extensions Magazine
P. 11

than high doses of synthetic estrogen and progestins (conventional HRT). The researchers
               conclude:
               “Our data support the hypothesis that DHEA treatment acts similarly to estrogen-
               progestin replacement therapy on the GHRH-GH-IGF-1 axis. This suggests that DHEA is
               more than a simple ‘antiaging product’; rather it should be considered an effective
               hormonal replacement treatment.”121
               One final note on women’s health is the ability of DHEA supplements to help balance estrogen
               and progesterone.

               Naysayer: How can that be? DHEA is not converted to progesterone.

               Stephen Cherniske: Not directly, but DHEA can raise progesterone levels by inhibiting
               conversion of pregnenalone to cortisol (via 17-hydroxyprogesterone).122 Thus, by any
               measure, DHEA appears to be a valuable and safe hormone supplement for women and men.

               Naysayer: Men don’t need progesterone.

               Stephen Cherniske: Of course they do. And a study just published with men suffering from
               fatigue and depression suggests that improvements in mood, energy, and libido derived from 25
               to 50 mg of DHEA resulted from increased progesterone levels, not testosterone.18

               Naysayer: There’s still no proof that DHEA is safe.

               Stephen Cherniske: Yes, there is. You’ve been trying to persuade the public that safety data do
               not exist, when there are adequate human clinical trials, including year-long studies with as
               many as 300 volunteers. Listen to the conclusion of one of these studies published in the
               Journal of Clinical Endo-crinology and Metabolism. This is a human study with a 25-mg/day
               group and a 50-mg/day group:
               “No accumulation of steroids was observed. No worrying transformation to androgen
               and estrogen was recorded; indeed, the limited increased estradiol in aged women could
               be predicted to be beneficial. These results suggested that daily oral administration of
               DHEA (25/50 mg) is safe in elderly subjects. The 50-mg dose was chosen for a 1 yr,
               double blind, placebo-controlled trial of daily oral administration of DHEA in 60- to 80-yr-
               old individuals.”123
               This was followed by an even larger, year-long evaluation. This landmark project, known as the
               DHEAge study, was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. The
               conclusion:

               “No potentially harmful accumulation of DHEAS and active steroids was recorded . . . A
               number of biological indices confirmed the lack of harmful consequences of this 50
               mg/day DHEA administration over one year, also indicating that this kind of replacement
               therapy normalized some effects of aging.”124

               Naysayer: Well, what about the well-known side effects that DHEA produces in women?

               Stephen Cherniske: Such as?

               Naysayer: Oily skin, acne, and growth of facial hair.

               Stephen Cherniske: Those are overdose effects, and to produce these effects, a woman would
               have to take an excessive dose of DHEA for months. Importantly, these effects are obvious and
               sequential.
   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16