Roland R. Tremblay, DSc, MD, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Laval University, Quebec City, QC.
Introduction
In both sexes, aging is associated with a progressive reduction in skeletal muscle mass and strength, although this may be masked by increases in subcutaneous fat or abdominal obesity that give the impression of stable body weight. Progressive frailty, however, occurs on a more global level with seniors "affected by multiple chronic diseases which cause physical and functional limitations."1 These comorbid diseases may cause a systemic stress, which by itself (excess cortisol secretion), or by virtue of its suppressive action on the pituitary-gonadal axis, leads to a decline in androgen production. While the tendency to associate andropause and androgens has become increasingly common, the causal link between male hormone deficiency and the clinical disorder andropause still remains a weak one. A medical anthropologist is certainly likely to qualify the association as a reductionist vision of the frailty syndrome. In a sense, this vision serves the interests of both patients and physicians: it facilitates the diagnostic approach and the treatment strategies in an aged population, estimated at 20%, that seeks medical attention because of frailty, low mental and physical energy, depression-like symptoms and sexual hypofunction.