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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
When Testosterone Is Not Enough
Fertility with HCG + SERM? HMG/rhFSH Impossible to get in Australia
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<blockquote data-quote="aneuman" data-source="post: 250848" data-attributes="member: 43264"><p>Thanks [USER=45090]@Adamsapple[/USER]. I'm glad I was able to help in this respect. I feel uneasy offering medical advise as I do not have any medical training at all, although I've spent quite some time at the library some time ago (yes, you got that right, the library) and now read a lot on PubMed and other well-respected literature regarding the endocrine system -which I'm fascinated by- and particularly male hormones for different reasons. If my experience helped you get advise and get better, that makes me happy.</p><p></p><p>This is a frequent fertility treatment protocol I've found in my readings. You mentioned that you wanted to follow Dr. Ramasamy's protocol. I know Dr. Ramasamy personally and I have read a lot of the research he's done in this area, so HCG + clomid is something that has been used a lot for fertility reasons. I do not have any personal experience in protocols for fertility, so any comment would be based on literature I've read.</p><p></p><p>As I mentioned earlier, HCG tends to increase my SHBG even at much lower doses (750 IU a week, 250 IU x 3) so it doesn't surprise me that it goes even higher with a higher dose, what I cannot say is whether that has any consequences other than higher sequestration of testosterone. I'm glad you endocrinologist has reviewed it and found no reasons of concern. Keep an eye on it.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Best of luck. I'm sure you'll be a dad soon.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Yes, that's something that I've read here and in some other literature bit is more a speculation or a hypothesis of what could happen and I don't think there's much evidence to support it. In any case I wanted you to be aware of this possibility.</p><p></p><p>Keep in mind that most of the talk and advice you'll find on this forum is NOT for fertility reasons. Your protocol probably needs to be substantially different from most people who are here simply to raise their T level for a variety of reasons, but don't care much about fertility. The best path forward is to monitor closely the levels of testosterone, estradiol, SHBG AND FSH. You need to increase your FSH to a level in which you start producing sperm again, not only testosterone. Clomid is the one that's going to help with that</p><p></p><p>As you said, as your system starts to recover, you may need less support and hopefully everything starts working well again, but for now, you may need to keep this protocol until you reach your goal.</p><p></p><p></p><p>That's great! I'm really happy, and yes, I know what you mean, that's life. </p><p></p><p>Wish you the best and let us know how you name the baby!</p><p></p><p>Best of luck.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="aneuman, post: 250848, member: 43264"] Thanks [USER=45090]@Adamsapple[/USER]. I'm glad I was able to help in this respect. I feel uneasy offering medical advise as I do not have any medical training at all, although I've spent quite some time at the library some time ago (yes, you got that right, the library) and now read a lot on PubMed and other well-respected literature regarding the endocrine system -which I'm fascinated by- and particularly male hormones for different reasons. If my experience helped you get advise and get better, that makes me happy. This is a frequent fertility treatment protocol I've found in my readings. You mentioned that you wanted to follow Dr. Ramasamy's protocol. I know Dr. Ramasamy personally and I have read a lot of the research he's done in this area, so HCG + clomid is something that has been used a lot for fertility reasons. I do not have any personal experience in protocols for fertility, so any comment would be based on literature I've read. As I mentioned earlier, HCG tends to increase my SHBG even at much lower doses (750 IU a week, 250 IU x 3) so it doesn't surprise me that it goes even higher with a higher dose, what I cannot say is whether that has any consequences other than higher sequestration of testosterone. I'm glad you endocrinologist has reviewed it and found no reasons of concern. Keep an eye on it. Best of luck. I'm sure you'll be a dad soon. Yes, that's something that I've read here and in some other literature bit is more a speculation or a hypothesis of what could happen and I don't think there's much evidence to support it. In any case I wanted you to be aware of this possibility. Keep in mind that most of the talk and advice you'll find on this forum is NOT for fertility reasons. Your protocol probably needs to be substantially different from most people who are here simply to raise their T level for a variety of reasons, but don't care much about fertility. The best path forward is to monitor closely the levels of testosterone, estradiol, SHBG AND FSH. You need to increase your FSH to a level in which you start producing sperm again, not only testosterone. Clomid is the one that's going to help with that As you said, as your system starts to recover, you may need less support and hopefully everything starts working well again, but for now, you may need to keep this protocol until you reach your goal. That's great! I'm really happy, and yes, I know what you mean, that's life. Wish you the best and let us know how you name the baby! Best of luck. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
When Testosterone Is Not Enough
Fertility with HCG + SERM? HMG/rhFSH Impossible to get in Australia
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