Exercise training improves free testosterone in lifelong sedentary aging men

Author:

Hayes Lawrence D1,Herbert Peter2,Sculthorpe Nicholas F3,Grace Fergal M4

Affiliation:

1. 1Active Ageing Research GroupDepartment of Medical and Sport Sciences, University of Cumbria, Lancaster, UK

2. 2School of SportHealth and Outdoor Education, Trinity Saint David, University of Wales, Carmarthen, UK

3. 3Institute of Clinical Exercise and Health ScienceUniversity of the West of Scotland, Hamilton, UK

4. 4Faculty of HealthFederation University, Victoria, Australia

Abstract

As the impact of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) on systemic hormones in aging men is unstudied to date, we investigated whether total testosterone (TT), sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), free testosterone (free-T) and cortisol (all in serum) were altered following HIIT in a cohort of 22 lifelong sedentary (62 ± 2 years) older men. As HIIT requires preconditioning exercise in sedentary cohorts, participants were tested at three phases, each separated by six-week training; baseline (phase A), following conditioning exercise (phase B) and post-HIIT (phase C). Each measurement phase used identical methods. TT was significantly increased following HIIT (~17%; P < 0.001) with most increase occurring during preconditioning (~10%; P = 0.007). Free-T was unaffected by conditioning exercise (P = 0.102) but was significantly higher following HIIT compared to baseline (~4.5%; P = 0.023). Cortisol remained unchanged from A to C (P = 0.138). The present data indicate a combination of preconditioning, and HIIT increases TT and SHBG in sedentary older males, with the HIIT stimulus accounting for a small but statistically significant increase in free-T. Further study is required to determine the biological importance of small improvements in free-T in aging men.

Publisher

Bioscientifica

Subject

Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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