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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Should I lower my TRT dose?
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<blockquote data-quote="Cataceous" data-source="post: 208114" data-attributes="member: 38109"><p>So the amount of hormone you'd produce naturally when young and healthy is irrelevant? Maybe if you have the "more is better" mentality and can't be bothered with considerations of normal physiology.</p><p></p><p>Please attempt to explain this and dig yourself into a deeper hole.</p><p></p><p>Normal ranges give us an indication of what's natural and healthy. You seem to be dismissing the idea of starting with physiological dosing, and instead want to jump immediately to the supraphysiological, as long as you think it feels good initially. Well hardly a day passes when someone's not on the forum complaining about the eventual side effects from this approach.</p><p></p><p>We've been through this. Lack of diurnal variation in TRT could mean that 20-25% more testosterone is needed to maintain the peak level all the time. The extreme outliers in natural production are making 9 mg T per day. When you add 25% it's equivalent to 113 mg T cypionate weekly. On the other hand, the average is around 6.5 mg, which equates to 81 mg TC per week. This is close to the middle dose of the Xyosted product, which you studiously refuse to comment on—due to its success and its maximum dose of 100 mg TE per week.</p><p></p><p>Who's doing the harm: The one encouraging him to stay at testosterone levels that may be double what's natural for him and well into supraphysiological territory? Or the one suggesting he try physiological levels before he jumps into a long-term experiment on the safety of excessive serum testosterone?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cataceous, post: 208114, member: 38109"] So the amount of hormone you'd produce naturally when young and healthy is irrelevant? Maybe if you have the "more is better" mentality and can't be bothered with considerations of normal physiology. Please attempt to explain this and dig yourself into a deeper hole. Normal ranges give us an indication of what's natural and healthy. You seem to be dismissing the idea of starting with physiological dosing, and instead want to jump immediately to the supraphysiological, as long as you think it feels good initially. Well hardly a day passes when someone's not on the forum complaining about the eventual side effects from this approach. We've been through this. Lack of diurnal variation in TRT could mean that 20-25% more testosterone is needed to maintain the peak level all the time. The extreme outliers in natural production are making 9 mg T per day. When you add 25% it's equivalent to 113 mg T cypionate weekly. On the other hand, the average is around 6.5 mg, which equates to 81 mg TC per week. This is close to the middle dose of the Xyosted product, which you studiously refuse to comment on—due to its success and its maximum dose of 100 mg TE per week. Who's doing the harm: The one encouraging him to stay at testosterone levels that may be double what's natural for him and well into supraphysiological territory? Or the one suggesting he try physiological levels before he jumps into a long-term experiment on the safety of excessive serum testosterone? [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Should I lower my TRT dose?
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