Does licorice affect hormones?

    Last Updated: October 13, 2024

    Licorice inhibits an enzyme responsible for the conversion of cortisol to cortisone, which has been shown to increase the cortisol-to-cortisone ratio when the dosage of glycyrrhetinic acid is more than 500 mg per day.[1][2][3][4][5] Elevations in cortisol can lead to high blood pressure and metabolic alkalosis, mimicking a condition known as hyperaldosteronism.[6][2]

    Increases in parathyroid hormone levels have also been observed in women who took licorice (3.5 grams per day over 2 months).[7] Licorice can inhibit enzymes leading to a decrease in DHEA, but this effect may be more pronounced in men.[5]

    Licorice also appears to inhibit testosterone production through enzymatic inhibition, thus lowering testosterone levels.[8][9] This appears to be a dose-dependent response. Licorice extract taken at 5–7 grams daily (containing 500 mg of glycyrrhizic acid) resulted in testosterone reductions in men, but the levels returned to normal when they stopped. Lower dosages do not appear to significantly affect testosterone levels.[8][10][11][12][5]

    Phytoestrogens are also found in licorice. Glabrene and liquiritigenin, for example, may activate some estrogen receptors, while glabridin seems to selectively modulate them.[8][13][14][15][16][17]

    References

    1. ^Walker BR, Edwards CRLicorice-induced hypertension and syndromes of apparent mineralocorticoid excess.Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am.(1994 Jun)
    2. ^Heilmann P, Heide J, Hundertmark S, Schöneshöfer MAdministration of glycyrrhetinic acid: significant correlation between serum levels and the cortisol/cortisone-ratio in serum and urine.Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes.(1999)
    3. ^Krähenbühl S, Hasler F, Frey BM, Frey FJ, Brenneisen R, Krapf RKinetics and dynamics of orally administered 18 beta-glycyrrhetinic acid in humans.J Clin Endocrinol Metab.(1994 Mar)
    4. ^MacKenzie MA, Hoefnagels WH, Jansen RW, Benraad TJ, Kloppenborg PWThe influence of glycyrrhetinic acid on plasma cortisol and cortisone in healthy young volunteers.J Clin Endocrinol Metab.(1990 Jun)
    5. ^Al-Dujaili EA, Kenyon CJ, Nicol MR, Mason JILiquorice and glycyrrhetinic acid increase DHEA and deoxycorticosterone levels in vivo and in vitro by inhibiting adrenal SULT2A1 activityMol Cell Endocrinol.(2011 Apr 10)
    6. ^Armanini D, Lewicka S, Pratesi C, Scali M, Zennaro MC, Zovato S, Gottardo C, Simoncini M, Spigariol A, Zampollo VFurther studies on the mechanism of the mineralocorticoid action of licorice in humans.J Endocrinol Invest.(1996 Oct)
    7. ^Mee Jung Mattarello, Stefano Benedini, Cristina Fiore, Valentina Camozzi, Paola Sartorato, Giovanni Luisetto, Decio ArmaniniEffect of licorice on PTH levels in healthy womenSteroids.(2006 May)
    8. ^Liu L, Li H, Tan G, Ma ZTraditional Chinese herbal medicine in treating amenorrhea caused by antipsychotic drugs: Meta-analysis and systematic review.J Ethnopharmacol.(2022 May 10)
    9. ^Decio Armanini, Mee Jung Mattarello, Cristina Fiore, Guglielmo Bonanni, Carla Scaroni, Paola Sartorato, Mario PalermoLicorice reduces serum testosterone in healthy womenSteroids.(Oct-Nov 2004)
    10. ^Armanini D, Bonanni G, Mattarello MJ, Fiore C, Sartorato P, Palermo MLicorice consumption and serum testosterone in healthy manExp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes.(2003 Sep)
    11. ^Helga Agusta Sigurjonsdottir, Magnus Axelson, Gudmundur Johannsson, Karin Manhem, Ernst Nystrom, Sven WallerstedtLiquorice in moderate doses does not affect sex steroid hormones of biological importance although the effect differs between the gendersHorm Res.(2006)
    12. ^R A Josephs, J S Guinn, M L Harper, F AskariLiquorice consumption and salivary testosterone concentrationsLancet.(2001 Nov 10)
    13. ^Tamir S, Eizenberg M, Somjen D, Izrael S, Vaya JEstrogen-like activity of glabrene and other constituents isolated from licorice root.J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol.(2001 Sep)
    14. ^S Tamir, M Eizenberg, D Somjen, N Stern, R Shelach, A Kaye, J VayaEstrogenic and antiproliferative properties of glabridin from licorice in human breast cancer cellsCancer Res.(2000 Oct 15)
    15. ^Somjen D, Katzburg S, Vaya J, Kaye AM, Hendel D, Posner GH, Tamir SEstrogenic activity of glabridin and glabrene from licorice roots on human osteoblasts and prepubertal rat skeletal tissues.J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol.(2004 Aug)
    16. ^Somjen D, Knoll E, Vaya J, Stern N, Tamir SEstrogen-like activity of licorice root constituents: glabridin and glabrene, in vascular tissues in vitro and in vivo.J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol.(2004 Jul)
    17. ^Simons R, Vincken JP, Mol LA, The SA, Bovee TF, Luijendijk TJ, Verbruggen MA, Gruppen HAgonistic and antagonistic estrogens in licorice root (Glycyrrhiza glabra).Anal Bioanal Chem.(2011 Jul)