Male Menopause: Is It a Myth or Reality?
Most people associate menopause with hot flashes, mood swings and the absence of menstruation. So what’s testosterone got to do with it?
Starting at around the age of 40, men start to lose about one percent of their testosterone per year. This gradual decrease in hormones is often referred to as male menopause or andropause because it produces many of the same symptoms as female menopause: irritability, abdominal weight gain, decreased sexual desire and function, sleep disturbances, sadness, fatigue, loss of strength and even hot flashes.
These midlife changes are often more subtle in men than in women. That’s because women experience a complete shutdown of ovarian hormone production at menopause versus the slow decline in testosterone in men.
The most uniquely male symptom, erectile dysfunction (ED), is perhaps the most misunderstood. ED and male menopause are not mutually exclusive, although they are closely associated and similarly treated, sometimes with male hormone replacement therapy (MHRT) to boost virility.