Seasonal and circadian variation in salivary testosterone in rural Bolivian men

dc.contributor.authorVirginia J. Vitzthum
dc.contributor.authorCarol M. Worthman
dc.contributor.authorCynthia M. Beall
dc.contributor.authorJonathan Thornburg
dc.contributor.authorEnrique Vargas
dc.contributor.authorMercedes Villena
dc.contributor.authorRudy Soria
dc.contributor.authorEsperanza Cáceres
dc.contributor.authorHilde Spielvogel
dc.coverage.spatialBolivia
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-22T14:12:29Z
dc.date.available2026-03-22T14:12:29Z
dc.date.issued2009
dc.descriptionCitaciones: 30
dc.description.abstractTestosterone (T) plays a key role in the increase and maintenance of muscle mass and bone density in adult men. Life history theory predicts that environmental stress may prompt a reallocation of such investments to those functions critical to survival. We tested this hypothesis in two studies of rural Bolivian adult men by comparing free T levels and circadian rhythms during late winter, which is especially severe, to those in less arduous seasons. For each pair of salivary T(AM)/T(PM) samples (collected in a approximately 12-h period), circadian rhythm was considered classic (C(CLASSIC)) if T(AM) > 110%T(PM), reverse (C(REVERSE)) if T(PM) > 110%T(AM), and flat (C(FLAT)) otherwise. We tested the hypotheses that mean T(AM) > mean T(PM) and that mean T(LW) < mean T(OTHER) (LW = late winter, OTHER = other seasons). In Study A, of 115 T(PM)-T(AM) pairs, 51% = C(CLASSIC), 39% = C(REVERSE), 10% = C(FLAT); in Study B, of 184 T(AM)-T(PM) pairs, 55% = C(CLASSIC), 33% = C(REVERSE), 12% = C(FLAT). Based on fitting linear mixed models, in both studies T(OTHER-AM) > T(OTHER-PM) (A: P = 0.035, B: P = 0.0005) and T(OTHER-AM) > T(LW-AM) (A: P = 0.054, B: P = 0.007); T(PM) did not vary seasonally, and T diurnality was not significant during late winter. T diurnality varied substantially between days within an individual, between individuals and between seasons, but neither T levels nor diurnality varied with age. These patterns may reflect the seasonally varying but unscheduled, life-long, strenuous physical labor that typifies many non-industrialized economies. These results also suggest that single morning samples may substantially underestimate peak circulating T for an individual and, most importantly, that exogenous signals may moderate diurnality and the trajectory of age-related change in the male gonadal axis.
dc.identifier.doi10.1002/ajhb.20927
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1002/ajhb.20927
dc.identifier.urihttps://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/45166
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherWiley
dc.relation.ispartofAmerican Journal of Human Biology
dc.sourceIndiana University Bloomington
dc.subjectCircadian rhythm
dc.subjectTestosterone (patch)
dc.subjectBiology
dc.subjectEndocrinology
dc.subjectInternal medicine
dc.subjectSeasonality
dc.subjectDemography
dc.titleSeasonal and circadian variation in salivary testosterone in rural Bolivian men
dc.typearticle

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