
Male Menopause is a Myth: An Andrologist's 40-Years Perspective on Testosterone and Aging
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Male Menopause is a Myth: An Andrologist’s 40-Year Perspective on Testosterone and Aging
After four decades as andrologist, I have witnessed the rise of a dangerous misconception: “male menopause” or andropause. Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) clinics promise restored youth & vitality, but the truth is simple — male menopause does not exist.
The Critical Difference
True menopause is a universal female event: ovarian function stops, estrogen and progesterone collapse, and menstruation ceases permanently. This transition occurs in all women.
Men, however, never experience complete testicular shutdown. Testosterone & sperm production continue—sometimes reduced but never absent—even into their 80s and 90s. There is no sudden hormonal cliff or universal threshold.
While testosterone may gradually decline with age, this change is variable and mild, not a biological equivalent of menopause. When decline is clinically significant, it is termed ADAM (Androgen Deficiency of the Aging Male)—a slow, non-universal process, entirely distinct from female menopause.
Why Testosterone Falls
In most men, lifestyle, not age, drives low testosterone.
- Obesity and metabolic syndrome top the list: visceral fat converts testosterone to estrogen via aromatase. Weight loss often restores normal levels.
- Inactivity lowers production; exercise boosts it.
- Sleep deprivation blunts the nocturnal testosterone surge; REM sleep is critical.
- Stress elevates cortisol, which suppresses testosterone.
- Medications such as beta-blockers, SSRIs, opioids, and finasteride frequently impair libido and erection.Sexual Dysfunction: Not Usually Low T
The biggest myth is that low testosterone causes most sexual problems. In reality, erectile dysfunction (ED) usually results from poor blood flow due to vascular disease—hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, or smoking.
ED often serves as an early marker of cardiovascular disease.
Psychological stress, anxiety, depression, and medication side effects are also major contributors.
The Testosterone Trap
The booming TRT industry markets testosterone as a universal elixir. While TRT helps men with genuine testicular or pituitary failure, many are treated unnecessarily.
Diagnosis is often based on a single borderline lab value, ignoring natural variation. Normal testosterone ranges are wide and context-dependent.
Excess TRT brings real risks:
- Testicular atrophy and infertility (due to HPG axis suppression)
- Gynecomastia from conversion to estrogen
- Polycythemia raising cardiovascular risk
- Worsened sleep apnea, mood swings, and aggression
- Dependency as natural production declines
What Really Works
The best “treatment” lies in daily choices, not injections.
- Exercise—especially resistance training—stimulates natural testosterone and protects vascular health.
- Weight control—losing even 10–15% body weight boosts levels markedly.
- Sleep—7–9 hours nightly is essential; address apnea.
- Stress management—through mindfulness, therapy, social connection, or outdoor activity—lowers cortisol.
- Medical optimization—manage diabetes, hypertension, and cholesterol; review medications for sexual side effects.
These measures restore hormonal balance naturally, without dependence on supplementation.
The Bottom Line
Men do not undergo menopause. Testicular function persists for life. Healthy living—not hormone therapy —preserves testosterone, vitality, and sexual health well into old age.
That is biology not mythology