What is the testosterone dose for muscle gain?

Some of the guys I work out with know that i inject T. It has come up why then do I not put on more gains, I do heavy rssitance training and little cardio. I explained that I am on a theraputic dose. Shoot I take a paltry 30 mg twice a week to keep red blood cells in line, so i could never do the super dosing that alot of body builders do.
At what levels do you begin to see substantial mass gains in the gym? I thought i read where guys may use 1500 mg/ injection when cycling on. I would die of a stroke in a matter of weeks doing that heavy dosage!!!

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The Bhasin Testosterone Dose-Response Study: What 125mg Weekly Teaches Us About Optimal TRT Dosing
By Nelson Vergel | ExcelMale.com | Updated December 2025
In the world of testosterone replacement therapy, one question comes up more than any other: "What's the right dose?" The answer isn't as simple as a single number, but a landmark 2001 study by Dr. Shalender Bhasin and colleagues provides the most rigorous dose-response data we have—and its findings remain remarkably relevant for optimizing TRT protocols today.
Published in the American Journal of Physiology: Endocrinology and Metabolism, this study systematically tested five different testosterone doses in healthy young men, measuring everything from muscle mass and strength to body fat, sexual function, and safety parameters. The results established that 125mg per week of testosterone enanthate represents a critical threshold—the lowest dose that produces statistically significant improvements in body composition while maintaining testosterone levels in the high-normal range with minimal adverse effects.
This article provides a comprehensive analysis of the Bhasin study and explains how its findings can inform modern TRT dosing decisions.

Study Design: The Gold Standard for Testosterone Dose-Response Research​

What makes the Bhasin study exceptionally valuable is its rigorous methodology. Unlike typical TRT studies that simply compare testosterone to placebo, this study created five distinct hormonal environments by suppressing each participant's endogenous testosterone production and then replacing it at precisely controlled doses.

Participants and Protocol​

Participants: 61 healthy eugonadal men aged 18-35 years with normal baseline testosterone levels and prior weight-lifting experience. This ensured the study measured testosterone's effects independent of training adaptation.
Hormonal Suppression: All participants received monthly injections of a long-acting GnRH agonist, which completely suppressed their endogenous testosterone production. This "chemical castration" created a clean slate—ensuring that all circulating testosterone came from the administered injections rather than natural production.
Testosterone Doses: Men were randomized to receive weekly intramuscular injections of testosterone enanthate at one of five doses: 25mg, 50mg, 125mg, 300mg, or 600mg per week for 20 weeks.
Standardized Conditions: Energy and protein intakes were standardized across all groups, eliminating dietary variation as a confounding factor. This is crucial—many studies fail to control for nutrition, making it impossible to isolate testosterone's effects from dietary differences.

Resulting Testosterone Levels by Dose​

The study measured nadir (trough) testosterone levels—the lowest point in the week, typically occurring just before the next injection. These trough values are clinically important because they represent the minimum testosterone exposure:

Weekly Dosee
Mean Nadir T (ng/dL) Lower Concentration
Hormonal Status
Clinical Range
25 mg
253

Severely hypogonadal

Below range

50 mg

306

Low-normal

Low end of range

125 mg

542

High-normal

Mid-to-upper range

300 mg

1,345

Supraphysiological

Above range

600 mg

2,370

Highly supraphysiological

Steroid-cycle range
Key Insight: The 125mg dose produced trough testosterone levels of 542 ng/dL—solidly in the high-normal range for healthy young men. This is clinically significant because many TRT practitioners aim for trough levels in the 500-700 ng/dL range, suggesting that 125mg weekly represents an evidence-based starting point for physiological testosterone replacement.

Body Composition Results: The 125mg Threshold Effect​

Perhaps the study's most clinically relevant finding was the identification of a clear threshold effect for body composition changes. Not all doses produced equivalent benefits—and statistical significance only emerged at 125mg and above.

Fat-Free Mass (Lean Body Mass) Changes​


Weekly Dose
Fat-Free Mass Change
Fat Mass Change
Statistical Significance
25 mg
No significant change

Increased

No

50 mg

No significant change

No change

No

125 mg

+3.4 kg (7.5 lbs)

Decreased

Yes (P<0.05)

300 mg

+5.2 kg (11.5 lbs)

Decreased

Yes (P<0.05)

600 mg

+7.9 kg (17.4 lbs)

Decreased

Yes (P<0.05)
The changes in fat-free mass were highly dose-dependent (P = 0.0001) and strongly correlated with log testosterone concentrations (r = 0.73, P = 0.0001). This linear dose-response relationship demonstrates that testosterone's anabolic effects on muscle are predictable and directly proportional to circulating hormone levels—more testosterone equals more muscle, at least within the range studied.
The Clinical Takeaway: Men receiving 25mg or 50mg weekly—resulting in low or low-normal testosterone levels—did not experience statistically significant improvements in lean mass. The 125mg dose was the minimum effective dose for producing meaningful body composition changes.

Strength and Power: Functional Outcomes Follow the Same Pattern​

Body composition changes are only meaningful if they translate to functional improvements. The Bhasin study measured leg press strength (one-repetition maximum), leg power (Nottingham power rig), and muscle volumes (MRI-measured thigh and quadriceps).
All three parameters showed the same dose-dependent pattern as fat-free mass:
• Leg Press Strength: Positively correlated with testosterone dose; significant improvements at 125mg and above
• Leg Power: Positively correlated with testosterone dose; demonstrates that muscle quality—not just size—improved
• Thigh Muscle Volume: MRI confirmed that testosterone-induced lean mass gains represented true muscle hypertrophy, not water retention
• Quadriceps Volume: Dose-dependent increases ranging from no change (25-50mg) to +48mL at 600mg
Companion studies using muscle biopsies from the same participants confirmed that the increase in muscle volume was due to true muscle fiber hypertrophy—increases in the cross-sectional area of both Type I (slow-twitch) and Type II (fast-twitch) muscle fibers—rather than intramuscular water or glycogen accumulation.

What Testosterone Did NOT Change: Sexual Function, Cognition, and PSA​

One of the study's most surprising findings was that several outcomes typically associated with testosterone did not show dose-dependent changes:

Sexual Function and Libido​

Sexual function questionnaires did not show significant changes at any dose—even at 600mg weekly. This may seem counterintuitive, but there are important caveats to consider:
1. Participants were young, healthy men with normal baseline testosterone and normal sexual function. There was no "floor" to improve from—they were already functioning optimally.
2. Sexual function may have a lower testosterone threshold than muscle anabolism. Once testosterone exceeds a minimum level (perhaps 250-350 ng/dL), additional testosterone may not further enhance libido or sexual performance.
3. Subsequent analysis suggested that doses of 300-600mg weekly showed a slight trend toward increased sexual desire—but this did not reach statistical significance given the small sample sizes.
Clinical Implication: Men with hypogonadism and sexual dysfunction may experience dramatic improvements with TRT because they are starting from deficient levels. But for men already in the normal range, higher doses may not translate to better sexual function.

Visual-Spatial Cognition and Mood​

Cognitive tests measuring visual-spatial abilities and mood assessments showed no significant changes across any dose group. Again, this likely reflects the normal baseline status of the participants rather than a true absence of testosterone effects on brain function.

PSA Levels​

Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels did not change significantly at any dose during the 20-week treatment period. This is reassuring for the safety profile of testosterone therapy in young men, though it should not be extrapolated to older men or longer treatment durations where age-related prostate changes may create a different context.

Safety Parameters: Where Higher Doses Show Tradeoffs​

While testosterone's anabolic benefits scaled linearly with dose, so did certain adverse effects. The study documented dose-dependent changes in several safety-relevant parameters:

Hemoglobin and Hematocrit​

Hemoglobin levels increased in a dose-dependent manner, with higher testosterone doses producing greater elevations. This reflects testosterone's stimulatory effect on erythropoiesis (red blood cell production). While modest increases in hemoglobin can be beneficial, excessive elevation (hematocrit >54%) increases blood viscosity and cardiovascular risk. The 125mg dose produced modest hemoglobin increases that remained within safe ranges for most participants.

HDL Cholesterol​

HDL ("good") cholesterol decreased in a dose-dependent manner—the higher the testosterone dose, the greater the HDL suppression. This is a recognized effect of androgens on hepatic lipid metabolism and represents a potential cardiovascular concern at supraphysiological doses. At 125mg weekly, HDL suppression was minimal and likely clinically insignificant. At 300-600mg weekly, HDL decreases were substantial and warrant consideration in risk-benefit analysis.

IGF-1 Levels​

Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) levels increased with testosterone dose. IGF-1 is an anabolic hormone that contributes to muscle protein synthesis and may partially mediate testosterone's effects on muscle. However, chronically elevated IGF-1 has been associated with increased cancer risk in some epidemiological studies, adding another reason to favor physiological over supraphysiological dosing.

Why 125mg Represents the "Sweet Spot" for TRT​

The Bhasin study provides compelling evidence that 125mg of testosterone enanthate weekly represents an optimal balance between efficacy and safety for testosterone replacement therapy. Consider the following:
1. Testosterone Levels in the High-Normal Range: The 125mg dose produced nadir testosterone levels of 542 ng/dL, placing men in the upper-normal physiological range. This is consistent with levels seen in healthy young men and aligns with current clinical targets for TRT (500-700 ng/dL trough).
2. Statistically Significant Body Composition Benefits: Unlike lower doses, 125mg produced meaningful improvements in fat-free mass (+3.4 kg) and reductions in fat mass—benefits that matter for metabolic health, functional capacity, and quality of life.
3. Minimal Adverse Effects: At 125mg, increases in hemoglobin, decreases in HDL, and elevations in IGF-1 were modest and clinically manageable. The 2005 companion study in older men specifically identified 125mg as providing "the best trade-off... associated with high normal testosterone levels, low frequency of adverse events, and significant gains in fat-free mass and muscle strength."
4. The Threshold Effect: The data clearly show that 25mg and 50mg weekly are insufficient for producing anabolic benefits—these doses merely prevent severe hypogonadism without optimizing body composition. For men seeking the benefits of TRT, underdosing represents a missed opportunity.

Clinical Applications: Translating Research to Practice​

Starting Dose Recommendations​

Based on the Bhasin data, 100-125mg of testosterone cypionate or enanthate weekly represents a reasonable starting dose for most men initiating TRT. This dose:
• Achieves high-normal testosterone levels
• Produces statistically significant improvements in body composition
• Minimizes the risk of supraphysiological exposure and associated adverse effects
• Provides a baseline from which to adjust based on individual response

Individual Variability Requires Monitoring​

The study reports mean values, but individual responses varied considerably. Some men achieved much higher or lower testosterone levels than average at the same dose due to differences in absorption, metabolism, SHBG levels, and other factors. This underscores the importance of checking actual testosterone levels (ideally trough values) after initiating therapy and adjusting the dose to achieve target levels rather than treating based on a fixed dose.

Injection Frequency Considerations​

The Bhasin study used once-weekly injections. However, modern TRT practice increasingly favors twice-weekly or even more frequent injections to minimize peak-to-trough fluctuations and maintain more stable testosterone levels. A man receiving 125mg weekly could alternatively inject 62.5mg twice weekly or 40-42mg every other day, potentially achieving better symptom control with fewer side effects related to hormonal peaks and troughs.

Conclusion: The Enduring Relevance of the Bhasin Dose-Response Data​

More than two decades after publication, the Bhasin testosterone dose-response study remains the definitive reference for understanding how testosterone dose affects body composition, strength, and safety parameters. Its findings have stood the test of time and continue to inform evidence-based TRT practice.
The key takeaways for men considering or currently on TRT:
• 125mg weekly is the minimum dose for significant body composition benefits —lower doses may not produce meaningful improvements despite achieving "normal" testosterone levels
• More is not always better —supraphysiological doses (300-600mg weekly) produce greater muscle gains but at the cost of increased adverse effects
• Different outcomes have different dose-response curves —sexual function may plateau at lower doses than required for optimal body composition
• Individual monitoring is essential —actual testosterone levels matter more than the dose administered
For clinicians and patients seeking to optimize TRT outcomes while minimizing risks, the 125mg weekly dose (or its equivalent with other formulations and injection frequencies) represents a scientifically grounded starting point—the threshold at which testosterone replacement truly becomes testosterone optimization.

Related ExcelMale Forum Discussions​

Explore these community discussions for additional insights:
Responses of Different Doses of Testosterone Injections on Body Composition, Strength, etc. – Original thread with study summary and graphs
Effect of Low and High Doses of Testosterone Injections on Hematocrit, PSA and HDL – Deep dive into safety parameters at different doses
What is the Optimum TRT Dose for Muscle Growth? Nelson Vergel Reviews the Data – Video discussion of optimal dosing strategies
How to Predict Estradiol and DHT at Different Testosterone Doses – Predictive modeling for hormone metabolites
The 12-Year-Old Study That Proves Testosterone Injections Every Two Weeks Fail – Why injection frequency matters as much as dose
How Long Does Testosterone Take to Show Effects? – Timeline expectations for TRT benefits

Key References​

1. Bhasin S, Woodhouse L, Casaburi R, et al. Testosterone dose-response relationships in healthy young men. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2001;281(6):E1172-E1181. [PubMed]
2. Bhasin S, Woodhouse L, Casaburi R, et al. Older men are as responsive as young men to the anabolic effects of graded doses of testosterone on the skeletal muscle. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2005;90(2):678-688. [PubMed]
3. Sinha-Hikim I, Artaza J, Woodhouse L, et al. Testosterone-induced increase in muscle size in healthy young men is associated with muscle fiber hypertrophy. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2002;283(1):E154-E164. [PubMed]
4. Sinha-Hikim I, Cornford M, Gaytan H, et al. Effects of testosterone supplementation on skeletal muscle fiber hypertrophy and satellite cells in community-dwelling older men. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2006;91(8):3024-3033. [PubMed]
5. Pharmacology of testosterone replacement therapy preparations. Transl Androl Urol. 2016;5(6):834-843. [PMC Full Text]
6. Full text of original study. American Physiological Society. [Journal Full Text]
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Testosterone replacement therapy requires a prescription and should be supervised by a qualified healthcare provider. Individual responses to therapy vary, and treatment decisions should be made in consultation with your physician based on your specific clinical circumstances.


About ExcelMale.com: ExcelMale is a men's health forum with over 24,000 members and 20+ years of archived discussions on testosterone replacement therapy, hormone optimization, and sexual health. Founded by Nelson Vergel, author of Testosterone: A Man's Guide and Beyond Testosterone, ExcelMale provides evidence-based information and peer support for men navigating hormone health decisions.
 
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I have noticed the difference between 90 mg and 110 mg once per week. My energy is much better when dose is higher. So, you noticed more strength and size? My libido has been great, but I’m not sure I want it to be any higher. How did the higher dose impact size, strength and libido?
Size and strength definitely went up. Can't really put a number on it but weight used on all exercises increased, everything felt lighter definitely had more energy in the gym. My whole life I kept workouts to one hour, on the higher dose I just wanted to keep training going for an hour and 15 sometimes an hour and a half workouts
As far as libido I never had any problems in that department with ED or anything like that. I didn't see any major difference while on the higher dose, had good erections, good morning wood which everyone seems to be concerned with
 
Hi

UOTE=Gene Devine;86997]30 mg injected twice a week is only going to suppress HPTA and not provide enough supplementation for you to see any benefit from TRT whatsoever.

At the very least 50 mg twice weekly would serve you much better and healthier as well.[/QUOTE]


Hi gene..new to site and tried to private message you, but had trouble finding option. Could you message me when you have a moment..assuming that's an option on the site.
 
Interesting.I'm the same age and hive toyed with trying this. Did you experience any side effects or problem? I do 100 mg weekly. Results have been good, but hard not to consider pushing it a bit.

Also remember when one uses higher doses of testosterone to accelerate the rate at which one attains increases in muscle fiber (actin/myosin) depending on the degree of muscle gain beyond what one could naturally attain due to genetics one would than require higher testosterone levels to maintain those gains permanently hence one could apply the blast/cruise analogy but for a majority that are using/abusing testosterone/aas for the sole purpose of increased muscle/strength gains higher cruise doses (more than average trt dose 100mg/week) are usually required if one has gained a significant amount of muscle. The main reason aside from health reasons (giving the body a break from supra-physiological levels of testosterone) when cycling is that cycling allows on to continue to make/attain gains beyond ones natural genetic potential (of course with implementing a proper pct protocol), those that choose not to cycle due to the ups/downs of cycling/coming off tend to either blast/cruise (eliminating post cycle pct) or stay on long term without coming off.
 
The first time I was placed on TRT my protocol was 200mg of test + 1500IU HCG once a week. I was consuming 6 meals a day and worked out 5 days a week. Managed to go from 155lbs to 189lbs in 6 months. It was absolutely incredible. All muscle and no fat gains, I was having my body fat % measured every month.
This time around I’m on 80mg test TWICE a week and 500IU HCG TWICE a week and have gone from 155lbs to 170lbs in 3 months. Will definitely look into increasing my dosage during my next consult.
 
125 mg per week was found to make significant muscle gains in young men
Responses of different doses of testosterone injections on body composition, strength, etc.

I wonder if injection frequency has any effects at this dose. Would less frequent doses that result in higher peaks that are supraphysiologic for a day or two have a different effect than say ED or EOD injection protocols where the peaks are lower? Assuming the same 125mg weekly dosage, in one injection frequency better than another when it comes to gains?
 
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Good question. No one has done a study measuring lean body mass using twice per week versus once per week dosing. My gut tells me that what matters is the "area under the curve" in T blood levels and not the "peak concentration".
 
I wonder if injection frequency has any effects at this dose. Would less frequent doses that result in higher peaks that are supraphysiologic for a day or two have a different effect than say ED or EOD injection protocols where the peaks are lower? Assuming the same 125mg weekly dosage, in one injection frequency better than another when it comes to gains?


EOD or ED dosing produces virtually static levels with the very little fluctuations. You need to decrease the dosage a little when moving injections closer together.
 
My gut tells me that what matters is the "area under the curve" in T blood levels and not the "peak concentration".

Thanks for your response, Nelson. Could you please clarify what you mean by that statement? I'm not sure that I follow. Of course I know you mentioned that it's just your gut feeling, but I'm certainly interested in your opinions.
 
Weekly injections have larger peaks (Cmax) than injections every two weeks (split dose). However, the total drug coverage (area under the curve or AUC) may be the same using either regimen. Does 125 mg once per week work better for muscle than 62.5 mg twice per week? No one knows. We have no data.

PK curve.webp
 
Personally, to answer that question I'd refer to a podcast I heard recently with Broderick Chavez (a sports performance specialist who specialises in enhanced athletes). He suggested that it's the levels over time that matter, for an extreme example if two people each had a bottle of 100 pills of an AAS (say Stanozolol) - one guy takes the 100 in one hit, the other takes 1 per day for 100 days, who is going to see the biggest gains?

Assuming your average circulating test over time is the same, I think logically a similar thing would apply to injection frequency. Higher peaks and lower troughs potentially means less gains than keeping levels more stable, there must come a point where all the inputs (training/available calories/hormonal milieu in the body) can only produce a certain amount of muscle protein synthesis, so those higher peaks are going to waste and the lower troughs result in less MPS. It's the same as setting a calorie surplus for bulking, if you eat at a 20% surplus, you'll probably gain as much muscle as your body can make, if you increase that to 30% or 40% you may gain more weight but it probably won't be lean mass!
 
I'm 48 yo, just found out I have low T, and based on symptoms, I'm guessing it's been low for the last ten years. I lift regularly and am not able to add muscle, but I've been pretty static in terms of retaining the muscle I added prior to 10 years or so.

I'm starting TRT and assuming I won't be able to add muscle mass. Maybe some modest gains if any. Let's say theoretically, I doubled my dose, it seems the general consensus would be that I could pack on muscle, maybe another 10 lbs within 2-3 months. But it also sounds like, as soon as I went back to normal T dose, I'd lose all the muscle.

Based on my experience the last ten years of not being able to gain muscle, but being successful at keeping the muscle I have, that doesn't seem right. Seems like it would be possible to maintain the muscle at lower T, just that you wouldn't be able to keep adding.

Am I off? I guess I probably am based on what I've read. But what is the science and why is it different than my experience?
 
Add calories and lift hard. You’ll gain muscle.
Why do you think that you won’t be able to gain muscle even on trt???
 
Add calories and lift hard. You’ll gain muscle.
Why do you think that you won’t be able to gain muscle even on trt???

That's just my gathering based on modest level of research. Mostly on this forum. I'm not an expert. I'll find out soon. It would be nice to add 10 lbs of muscle.

I'm more curious about the idea of a high dose TRT/low dose cycle of T to pack on some muscle and the ability to maintain it long term at regular TRT levels.
 
Great study. I think I saw that before. This is the question I have. Let's say one was on 100 mg per week. Bumped it up to 200 and packed on the muscle that study suggests. Then went back to 100. Could he maintain the new muscle mass at the 100?
 
That's just my gathering based on modest level of research. Mostly on this forum. I'm not an expert. I'll find out soon. It would be nice to add 10 lbs of muscle.

I'm more curious about the idea of a high dose TRT/low dose cycle of T to pack on some muscle and the ability to maintain it long term at regular TRT levels.

Of course you can gain muscle. Even at your age. I've seen plenty of people (including myself) manage to gain muscle in their middle age even with low T, if you get your T levels optimal you'll be able to do it, you just have to train and eat.

I'm only a couple of months into my TRT journey, and I'm a little younger than you at 42, but I have started to see muscle gain even in a slight calorie deficit which is something I couldn't achieve before. It's amazing what having decent levels of testosterone floating around can do for you. And I've been training for a couple of years now so my noobie gains are gone, but adding TRT has made it like being a noob all over again. I probably need to eat more and make the most of it in case it doesn't last.
 
200mg
im ex bodybuilder
200mg it's noticable for muscles but not everybody can handle this dose for long enough to see results :)
100mg not really but i think if you were really low T for long time maybe it will work good because androgen receptors are fresh
 
The first time I was placed on TRT my protocol was 200mg of test + 1500IU HCG once a week. I was consuming 6 meals a day and worked out 5 days a week. Managed to go from 155lbs to 189lbs in 6 months. It was absolutely incredible. All muscle and no fat gains, I was having my body fat % measured every month.
This time around I’m on 80mg test TWICE a week and 500IU HCG TWICE a week and have gone from 155lbs to 170lbs in 3 months. Will definitely look into increasing my dosage during my next consult.

Have any of you guys that take hcg along with the test c had any problems with nausea? I started my injections last Friday night 100mg test c (sesame oil) and 500mg of hcg both sub q. During the night early Sunday morning I woke up with severe diarrhea and was nauseous all day. Thought, maybe it was a bug(and still maybe) bc another guy was sick from work over the weekend. Took my monday injections and had a slight headache today and a little nauseous but not too bad at supper today. Im switching from the cream to injections bc i have a 5 month old and donth want to get any on her. I have never been allergic to any medication or ever had an allergic reaction to anything. Does my body need to just get used to the switch or all coincidence?
 

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TRT Hormone Predictor Widget

TRT Hormone Predictor

Predict estradiol, DHT, and free testosterone levels based on total testosterone

⚠️ Medical Disclaimer

This tool provides predictions based on statistical models and should NOT replace professional medical advice. Always consult with your healthcare provider before making any changes to your TRT protocol.

ℹ️ Input Parameters

Normal range: 300-1000 ng/dL

Predicted Hormone Levels

Enter your total testosterone value to see predictions

Results will appear here after calculation

Understanding Your Hormones

Estradiol (E2)

A form of estrogen produced from testosterone. Important for bone health, mood, and libido. Too high can cause side effects; too low can affect well-being.

DHT

Dihydrotestosterone is a potent androgen derived from testosterone. Affects hair growth, prostate health, and masculinization effects.

Free Testosterone

The biologically active form of testosterone not bound to proteins. Directly available for cellular uptake and biological effects.

Scientific Reference

Lakshman KM, Kaplan B, Travison TG, Basaria S, Knapp PE, Singh AB, LaValley MP, Mazer NA, Bhasin S. The effects of injected testosterone dose and age on the conversion of testosterone to estradiol and dihydrotestosterone in young and older men. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2010 Aug;95(8):3955-64.

DOI: 10.1210/jc.2010-0102 | PMID: 20534765 | PMCID: PMC2913038

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