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7 - Dehydroepiandrosterone in aging and mental health

from Part II - Hormones and mental health in the elderly

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2009

Mary F. Morrison
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania
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Summary

Introduction

Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and its sulfated metabolite, DHEA-S (together abbreviated DHEA(S)), are quantitatively the most important adrenal corticosteroids in man, although their physiological roles are unknown. These steroids have captured widespread scientific and public attention in recent years due to three key observations. First, circulating levels of these steroids progressively decline from young adulthood through the end of the lifespan; they also decrease in response to chronic stress or illness. Second, preclinical studies suggest that DHEA(S) protects against certain pathological processes seen in illness and with aging. Third, some epidemiological studies in man suggest that relatively higher DHEA(S) levels are associated with enhanced physical and mental well-being. Such findings have raised hope that replacement dosing with pharmaceutical DHEA may enhance and prolong life, although very limited clinical data exist to support this. This chapter will review preclinical and clinical data regarding the effects of DHEA(S) in the central nervous system, its biological role in aging and mental health and its possible efficacy in treating neuropsychiatric illness in the middle-aged and elderly.

DHEA(S) as a neurosteroid

DHEA(S) is synthesized in situ in brain, with glial cells playing a major role in its formation and metabolism; it has therefore, been termed a neurosteroid (Baulieu, 1997). Accumulation of DHEA(S) in rat brain is largely independent of adrenal and gonadal synthesis, remaining constant after orchiectomy, adrenalectomy and dexamethasone administration (Robel & Baulieu, 1995; Corpechot et al., 1981).

Type
Chapter
Information
Hormones, Gender and the Aging Brain
The Endocrine Basis of Geriatric Psychiatry
, pp. 144 - 167
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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