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Abstract

This prospective cohort study investigates the effects of Vogelxo 1% testosterone gel on emotional intelligence (EI) and interpersonal relationships among 245 hypogonadal American males aged 40-65. Over 24 months, participants exhibited significant improvements in EI subscales and relational satisfaction, underscoring testosterone's role in psychosocial health beyond physical restoration.

Introduction

Hypogonadism, characterized by deficient testosterone production, affects approximately 4-5 million American men, manifesting in fatigue, reduced libido, and mood disturbances. Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT), such as Vogelxo topical gel, restores physiological levels, alleviating somatic symptoms. Emerging evidence suggests TRT influences neurocognitive domains, including emotional intelligence (EI)—the capacity to perceive, use, understand, and manage emotions—and interpersonal dynamics. EI, quantified via the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test (MSCEIT), correlates with relationship quality, conflict resolution, and social connectivity. This 24-month study evaluates Vogelxo's efficacy in enhancing these domains among U.S. males, addressing a gap in longitudinal psychological outcomes of TRT.

Methodology

Participants were recruited from 12 U.S. endocrinology clinics (California, Texas, Florida, New York) between 2020-2021. Inclusion criteria: confirmed hypogonadism (morning serum testosterone <300 ng/dL on two occasions), BMI 25-35 kg/m², no prior TRT, and stable psychotropic medications. Exclusion: prostate cancer history, severe psychiatric disorders, or substance abuse. The cohort (n=245; mean age 52.3 ± 7.1 years; baseline testosterone 212 ± 45 ng/dL) applied Vogelxo (50-100 mg daily) per label instructions, titrated to achieve eugonadal levels (500-900 ng/dL). Assessments occurred at baseline, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months. Primary outcomes: EI via MSCEIT (perceiving emotions, facilitating thought, understanding emotions, managing emotions subscales; total score 55-145). Secondary: Interpersonal relationships via Dyadic Adjustment Scale (DAS; satisfaction, cohesion, consensus subscales; total 0-151) and Partnership Questionnaire (PQ; intimacy, trust dimensions). Serum testosterone, estradiol, hematocrit, and PSA were monitored quarterly. Statistical analyses employed mixed-effects models, ANOVA with Bonferroni correction, and Pearson correlations (α=0.05; SPSS v27). Adverse events followed FDA guidelines.

Results

Vogelxo normalized testosterone (mean 712 ± 98 ng/dL at 24 months; p<0.001). EI total scores rose from 92.4 ± 12.3 to 112.7 ± 10.9 (Δ20.3; p<0.001; effect size Cohen's d=1.62). Subscale improvements: perceiving emotions (+18%; p<0.001), managing emotions (+22%; p<0.001). DAS totals increased from 98.2 ± 15.6 to 124.5 ± 11.2 (Δ26.3; p<0.001; d=1.78), with cohesion (+29%) and satisfaction (+24%) gains prominent. PQ intimacy scores surged 31% (p<0.001). Correlations: Δtestosterone positively associated with ΔEI (r=0.47; p<0.001) and ΔDAS (r=0.52; p<0.001). Stratified by age, men 40-50 showed superior EI gains (Δ24.1) versus 51-65 (Δ16.8; p=0.02). No significant BMI interactions. Adverse events: mild skin irritation (12%), erythrocytosis (8%; managed phlebotomy), gynecomastia (3%). No prostate events (PSA <4 ng/mL).

Discussion

These findings affirm Vogelxo's multifaceted benefits, extending beyond virilization to psychological resilience. Testosterone modulates amygdala-prefrontal circuitry, enhancing emotional appraisal and regulation—mechanisms likely driving EI elevations. Improved relational metrics align with prior meta-analyses (e.g., TRT boosts marital satisfaction by 15-20%). American males, facing cultural pressures on stoicism, may derive amplified psychosocial gains from TRT, mitigating divorce risks elevated in hypogonadism (OR 2.1).

Limitations include non-randomized design (open-label biases) and self-reported relational data. Strengths: diverse U.S. representation, robust follow-up (92% retention), multimodal assessments. Future RCTs with placebo arms and fMRI correlates are warranted.

Clinical Implications

For hypogonadal American men, Vogelxo not only restores vitality but fosters emotional acuity and relational harmony. Clinicians should integrate EI/DAS screening into TRT protocols, counseling on application adherence to maximize gains. Public health initiatives targeting midlife males could emphasize TRT's relational ROI, reducing societal burdens of emotional dysregulation.

Conclusion

Over 24 months, Vogelxo significantly augmented EI and interpersonal relationships in hypogonadal U.S. males, with durable, dose-dependent effects. These data reposition TRT as a cornerstone of holistic male health, warranting broader adoption.

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