Abstract

The factors responsible for the marked gender differences in risk of coronary heart disease and atherosclerosis severity remain largely undetermined. While some clinical and experimental evidence supports a protective effect of endogenous estrogen on the initiation and progression of atherosclerosis and incidence of coronary heart disease, much of the epidemiological data do not support this conclusion. The possibility that endogenous androgens may have adverse effects on atherosclerosis progression and coronary risk has received little attention. We investigated the effects of experimentally induced hyperandrogenism in female cynomolgus monkeys with diet-induced atherosclerosis. Animals were assigned randomly to one of four treatment groups: (1) untreated controls, (2) ovariectomized (sex hormone-deficient) controls, (3) treated with androstenedione and estrone (mild hyperandrogenism), or (4) treated with testosterone (male plasma androgen pattern). At necropsy, coronary atherosclerosis was approximately twice as extensive (P < .05) in testosterone-treated animals relative to untreated controls, while treatment with androstenedione and estrone had no effect on atherosclerosis extent. Coronary plaque size was positively correlated with lumen size in intact and ovariectomized controls; however, there was no evidence of a similar relation between animals in either androgen treatment group. The atherogenic effects of testosterone were independent of variations in plasma lipoprotein and nonlipoprotein risk variables. Although chronic hyperandrogenism had adverse effects on atherosclerosis progression, it reversed (P < .03) atherosclerosis-related impairment of endothelium-dependent vasodilator responses. We conclude that an experimentally induced male plasma androgen pattern results in exacerbation of diet-induced atherosclerosis-related arterial remodeling in female monkeys.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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