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Reproductive Endocrinology of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
by
Handelsman, David J
, Wierman, Margaret E
, Grossmann, Mathis
, Angus, Peter
in
17β-Estradiol
/ Androgen receptors
/ Androgens
/ Carcinogenesis
/ Carcinogens
/ Carcinoma
/ Cellular signal transduction
/ Clinical trials
/ Development and progression
/ Dimorphism
/ Diseases
/ Endocrinology
/ Energy balance
/ Estradiol
/ Estrogens
/ Fatty liver
/ Fibrosis
/ Genes
/ Globulins
/ Glucose
/ Glucose metabolism
/ Health aspects
/ Hepatocellular carcinoma
/ Homeostasis
/ Hormones
/ Insulin
/ Insulin resistance
/ Lipogenesis
/ Liver
/ Liver cancer
/ Liver diseases
/ Male identity
/ Males
/ Men
/ Metabolism
/ Pathogenesis
/ Phenols (Class of compounds)
/ Physiological aspects
/ Reproduction (Biology)
/ Reproductive system
/ Rodents
/ Sex hormones
/ Signaling
/ Steatosis
/ Steroid hormones
/ Steroids
/ Structure-function relationships
/ Testosterone
/ Women
/ Xenobiotics
2019
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Reproductive Endocrinology of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
by
Handelsman, David J
, Wierman, Margaret E
, Grossmann, Mathis
, Angus, Peter
in
17β-Estradiol
/ Androgen receptors
/ Androgens
/ Carcinogenesis
/ Carcinogens
/ Carcinoma
/ Cellular signal transduction
/ Clinical trials
/ Development and progression
/ Dimorphism
/ Diseases
/ Endocrinology
/ Energy balance
/ Estradiol
/ Estrogens
/ Fatty liver
/ Fibrosis
/ Genes
/ Globulins
/ Glucose
/ Glucose metabolism
/ Health aspects
/ Hepatocellular carcinoma
/ Homeostasis
/ Hormones
/ Insulin
/ Insulin resistance
/ Lipogenesis
/ Liver
/ Liver cancer
/ Liver diseases
/ Male identity
/ Males
/ Men
/ Metabolism
/ Pathogenesis
/ Phenols (Class of compounds)
/ Physiological aspects
/ Reproduction (Biology)
/ Reproductive system
/ Rodents
/ Sex hormones
/ Signaling
/ Steatosis
/ Steroid hormones
/ Steroids
/ Structure-function relationships
/ Testosterone
/ Women
/ Xenobiotics
2019
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Reproductive Endocrinology of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
by
Handelsman, David J
, Wierman, Margaret E
, Grossmann, Mathis
, Angus, Peter
in
17β-Estradiol
/ Androgen receptors
/ Androgens
/ Carcinogenesis
/ Carcinogens
/ Carcinoma
/ Cellular signal transduction
/ Clinical trials
/ Development and progression
/ Dimorphism
/ Diseases
/ Endocrinology
/ Energy balance
/ Estradiol
/ Estrogens
/ Fatty liver
/ Fibrosis
/ Genes
/ Globulins
/ Glucose
/ Glucose metabolism
/ Health aspects
/ Hepatocellular carcinoma
/ Homeostasis
/ Hormones
/ Insulin
/ Insulin resistance
/ Lipogenesis
/ Liver
/ Liver cancer
/ Liver diseases
/ Male identity
/ Males
/ Men
/ Metabolism
/ Pathogenesis
/ Phenols (Class of compounds)
/ Physiological aspects
/ Reproduction (Biology)
/ Reproductive system
/ Rodents
/ Sex hormones
/ Signaling
/ Steatosis
/ Steroid hormones
/ Steroids
/ Structure-function relationships
/ Testosterone
/ Women
/ Xenobiotics
2019
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Reproductive Endocrinology of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Journal Article
Reproductive Endocrinology of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
2019
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Overview
Abstract
The liver and the reproductive system interact in a multifaceted bidirectional fashion. Sex steroid signaling influences hepatic endobiotic and xenobiotic metabolism and contributes to the pathogenesis of functional and structural disorders of the liver. In turn, liver function affects the reproductive axis via modulating sex steroid metabolism and transport to tissues via sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG). The liver senses the body's metabolic status and adapts its energy homeostasis in a sex-dependent fashion, a dimorphism signaled by the sex steroid milieu and possibly related to the metabolic costs of reproduction. Sex steroids impact the pathogenesis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, including development of hepatic steatosis, fibrosis, and carcinogenesis. Preclinical studies in male rodents demonstrate that androgens protect against hepatic steatosis and insulin resistance both via androgen receptor signaling and, following aromatization to estradiol, estrogen receptor signaling, through regulating genes involved in hepatic lipogenesis and glucose metabolism. In female rodents in contrast to males, androgens promote hepatic steatosis and dysglycemia, whereas estradiol is similarly protective against liver disease. In men, hepatic steatosis is associated with modest reductions in circulating testosterone, in part consequent to a reduction in circulating SHBG. Testosterone treatment has not been demonstrated to improve hepatic steatosis in randomized controlled clinical trials. Consistent with sex-dimorphic preclinical findings, androgens promote hepatic steatosis and dysglycemia in women, whereas endogenous estradiol appears protective in both men and women. In both sexes, androgens promote hepatic fibrosis and the development of hepatocellular carcinoma, whereas estradiol is protective.
Publisher
Endocrine Society,Copyright Oxford University Press,Oxford University Press
Subject
/ Cellular signal transduction
/ Diseases
/ Fibrosis
/ Genes
/ Glucose
/ Hormones
/ Insulin
/ Liver
/ Males
/ Men
/ Phenols (Class of compounds)
/ Rodents
/ Steroids
/ Structure-function relationships
/ Women
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