madman
Super Moderator
Post-Finasteride Syndrome is the current term for a rare syndrome of devastating physical, neurological, and sexual side effects that persist and progress after stopping finasteride. The condition occurs primarily in younger men who have taken the drug to treat hair loss. There is currently no effective treatment for this disease.
PFS has a disastrous impact on patients, their families and their friends. It often causes disability, isolation and suicide. Every person is valuable, and everyone deserves to make a fully informed choice with their health.
Alfonso Urbanucci, Ph.D. is Group Leader and Senior Research Fellow at the Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology at the University of Tampere, Associate Investigator at the Center for Molecular Medicine Norway, and currently Project Group Leader at the Institute for Cancer Research at Oslo University Hospital. Dr. Urbanucci has published a series of papers on the molecular effects of androgen receptor deregulation on chromatin and transcription, one of them being, “Androgen receptor overexpression alters binding dynamics of the receptor to chromatin and chromatin structure.” He is a member of PFS Network’s scientific advisory board and lead researcher on the charity’s current genetics study in Tampere.
00:00 Introduction
01:30 Dr. Urbanucci’s work to date
03:40 How the androgen system functions
05:44 How a disease involving AR could cause multi-systemic symptoms
09:28 How Dr. Urbanucci’s previous work lends itself to studying PFS
13:09 Why Dr. Urbanucci wished to conduct a WGS (genetics study)
15:53 What the current genetics study in Tampere will analyze
17:37 How a WGS can assist in understanding an epigenetics-mediated condition
19:47 How the epigenetics study in Kiel and the genetics study in Tampere intersect
21:03 What a whole genome sequencing (WGS) is
22:38 Why the current genetics study is a logical next step after the Baylor study
25:10 What the “crash” patients experience might entail
28:30 What outcomes patients can expect from the current genetics study
PFS has a disastrous impact on patients, their families and their friends. It often causes disability, isolation and suicide. Every person is valuable, and everyone deserves to make a fully informed choice with their health.
Alfonso Urbanucci, Ph.D. is Group Leader and Senior Research Fellow at the Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology at the University of Tampere, Associate Investigator at the Center for Molecular Medicine Norway, and currently Project Group Leader at the Institute for Cancer Research at Oslo University Hospital. Dr. Urbanucci has published a series of papers on the molecular effects of androgen receptor deregulation on chromatin and transcription, one of them being, “Androgen receptor overexpression alters binding dynamics of the receptor to chromatin and chromatin structure.” He is a member of PFS Network’s scientific advisory board and lead researcher on the charity’s current genetics study in Tampere.
00:00 Introduction
01:30 Dr. Urbanucci’s work to date
03:40 How the androgen system functions
05:44 How a disease involving AR could cause multi-systemic symptoms
09:28 How Dr. Urbanucci’s previous work lends itself to studying PFS
13:09 Why Dr. Urbanucci wished to conduct a WGS (genetics study)
15:53 What the current genetics study in Tampere will analyze
17:37 How a WGS can assist in understanding an epigenetics-mediated condition
19:47 How the epigenetics study in Kiel and the genetics study in Tampere intersect
21:03 What a whole genome sequencing (WGS) is
22:38 Why the current genetics study is a logical next step after the Baylor study
25:10 What the “crash” patients experience might entail
28:30 What outcomes patients can expect from the current genetics study