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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Side Effect Management
Permanent crash of estrogen?
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<blockquote data-quote="Anonymon" data-source="post: 203024" data-attributes="member: 42608"><p>I had similar experiences on and after finasteride. I didn’t know much about or take seriously the post finasteride stuff and figured at worst I’d just come off and be fine. I was not, then looked more into it and wish I had listened to the warnings despite knowing many guys that do just fine on it. For that reason, I’m pretty open minded about this stuff.</p><p></p><p>Although it is always possible that the issues aren’t E2 related, I agree that blood tests don’t always get you the fullest picture of things. I can break my body with a small amount of T3 and have my E2 and free T go through the roof with all the symptoms of being low in both because neither are getting into the cells. I can make it worse in a dose dependent manner too.</p><p></p><p>Blood tests are always helpful, but are most reflective of people that aren’t having issues. You need to take things in context after that the weirder your issues are, which are always harder to deal with. In all of it, you always have to be your own advocate and not give up because nobody else is there to help you the further your issues are off the beaten path.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Anonymon, post: 203024, member: 42608"] I had similar experiences on and after finasteride. I didn’t know much about or take seriously the post finasteride stuff and figured at worst I’d just come off and be fine. I was not, then looked more into it and wish I had listened to the warnings despite knowing many guys that do just fine on it. For that reason, I’m pretty open minded about this stuff. Although it is always possible that the issues aren’t E2 related, I agree that blood tests don’t always get you the fullest picture of things. I can break my body with a small amount of T3 and have my E2 and free T go through the roof with all the symptoms of being low in both because neither are getting into the cells. I can make it worse in a dose dependent manner too. Blood tests are always helpful, but are most reflective of people that aren’t having issues. You need to take things in context after that the weirder your issues are, which are always harder to deal with. In all of it, you always have to be your own advocate and not give up because nobody else is there to help you the further your issues are off the beaten path. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Side Effect Management
Permanent crash of estrogen?
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