First post. Can’t get E2 under control, starting to worry

Buy Lab Tests Online

Charliebizz

Well-Known Member
My endo recently said to me, "Be careful gauging success just about how you feel. History is full of stories of failures based on people who judge success based on feeling."
History is also full of drs treating numbers and seriously fucking people Up in all aspects of medicine. Look at what they do with statins for a guy with cholesterol of 201. Or the dht blocking meds for bph. Come on man your smarter then that.
 
Defy Medical TRT clinic doctor

BigTex

Well-Known Member
To me it seems a little questionable. "Safely" tolerating the treatment in the short term does not imply long-term safety. Recall @tareload's graphs suggesting that risk can accumulate over years to decades. There should also be more medical curiosity about why the guy appears to need triple the typical heathy production rate. In any case, I'm not suggesting that treatment be denied if all else has failed, but the patient must be well-informed.
Oh, I agree with you 100%. We definitely need more information on what is healthy period. This whole TRT business is still in its infancy. I think some of the new genetic studies on how individuals respond to doses of a given medication answer a lot. There are people who get great results on very low doses (me) and those who need many times more to get the same response. Treating by averages and closing your eyes to how individuals respond is closing your eyes to the truth. I believe in one of the videos Dr. Lipshultz produced he talked about individual responses and mentioned the terms hyper-responders and hypo-responders. It is very possible that some guys need 200mg to be asymptomatic and some like myself need very little. I mentioned once before that while I was in my late 40's and still competing, I set 14 world records in powerlifting using only 250mg of test enanthate a week. Some guys I knew were using 1g+ with all sorts of other stuff. I respond to anabolic steroids much better than most people do. All other medication seems to be the same. If we learning more about the genetic responses to medication we could avoid anyone having side effects from taking too much. We also could be much more accurate in prescribing that 1st dose of TRT. When I was prescribed the "average dose" it took me months to recover from the unwanted side effects. On the flip side, why should a guy who is desperate enough to seek medical help for low T have to spend a year or more adjusting doses to ever feel good? We are in the 21st century and we are managing low T like it was the 19th century. Very little research going on because most can't get over the stigma of anabolic steroids being deadly.

I got to a variety of doctors and if it was up to them, I would not be informed at all. I get informed because I know enough to ask question so I can be informed.
 

BigTex

Well-Known Member
I love this forum. And I’m not taking a shot at anyone here. But on this forum in particular I see the most men trying to keep the dose low and levels mid range. And you know what I see the most complaints in this forum if never seeing symptom resolution. I see way too much talk of estrogen being the culprit when it very well could be guys just not getting the levels of t high enough to feel good. Also another observation that I’ve made. Is tons of men actually do feel better on the cream vs injectables for whatever reason. I am one of them and trust me I would much rather inject.

I’ve had low t since I’m 26 years old.(42 in a few months) I did whatever I could not to be on trt. I’ve been in the trt space for almost 17 years. I tried everything I could to avoid trt. I dabbled in it a few times. T cyp at any dose made me feel awful. I tried 60mg a week up to 120. Just felt horrible. Then in 2020 I decided to commit. And try something new. I started with defy. They want me to start at 120mg a week split m-w-f. I was afraid. I asked for enanthate. And it was a completely different experience. I started at 90mg a week but was getting some symptom relief. I tried pushing the boundaries because I was still having some erection issues and energy issues. I went up to 160 and all the way back down to 60 a week. I just couldn’t get it right. But then I found cream. While it’s not perfect it’s the best I ever felt trt wise hands down. I can’t explain why. But my point is trt isn’t always as cut and dry as people think. And for a good amount of people keeping average levels while having your hpta shut down from medication just doesn’t cut it.

I’m sorry if my posts come off all messed up. My phone does not work correctly in this forum for some reason.
Amen @Charliebizz! If doctors were able to get this TRT treatment down correctly, forums like this would not exist and we would have a whole lot of satisfied men posting here. It is discouraging to see so many men complaining about how they fill and wanting advice. Yet 99% of us are going to doctors where this advice should be coming from. Like I said earlier, TRT is in its infancy. There is very little research and we are just starting to admit using anabolic steroids is not going to kill you. I have a colleague name Dr. Jose Antonio. He published a research study quite a few years back where he said, there have been over 50 million people who used anabolic steroids and to date, not one death has ever been show to be caused by anabolic steroids. He said if they were as deadly we we believed the streets would be littered with dead steroid users. So what does our government do but criminalize steroid users. Had medical science continues with research on these drugs and not stopped in 1989, we might have a lot more informed doctors. Many are still afraid to even prescribe testosterone for fear of reprisal from the DEA. Instead we have 50-60 years worth the athletes who have been using anabolic steroids and have a much greater knowledge of their use than most of our doctors. Point in case, SWALL (Dr, Crisler) hung out on bodybuilder forums for years to learn what they knew.

Has anyone bothered looking at any of @RobRoy references he has posted? I have had a few private conversations with the doctor and now know who he really is and have earned a great amount of respect for him. He is not all about making money and had spent quite a bit of time researching every aspect of TRT. Not one time has he asked me to be one of his patients. IMHO, he is honestly trying to help. He reminds me of Dr. Crisler, for a long time people shunned him but he passed on information and never hustled any of the boards for patients. He honestly wanted men to feel better without negative health effects. I find it awfully odd that there are a few legitimate doctors including Dr. Lipshultz who are all saying the same thing but being ignored here. Yet we all come here for information.

@Charliebizz I have a lot of respect for your postings and had no idea you were such a veteran of TRT.
 

Cataceous

Super Moderator
...
My question to you is what’s the point of trt if you do not feel any better?
Of course if nothing changes then it may suggest that the underlying problem is not hypogonadism. If it is hypogonadism then a more likely scenario with TRT is that some symptoms improve, some don't, and new ones may develop. This shouldn't be a surprise when the treatment itself can affect more than 20 other hormones. Talk on the Internet is cheap, but the controlled studies point to a relatively low threshold for serum testosterone needed to resolve low T-induced issues with libido and ED; higher levels gave no additional benefit in these areas.

Among those who believe they need very high levels to do well, how many have actually spent significant time trying a range of physiological levels? Certainly very few who use weekly injections of TC or TE, given the large peak-trough variations seen with typical formulations. This is one of the selling points of Xyosted: you can achieve decent stability with weekly injections.
 

BigTex

Well-Known Member
My endo recently said to me, "Be careful gauging success just about how you feel. History is full of stories of failures based on people who judge success based on feeling."
But then if you don't feel good, what success are you really having?
 

BigTex

Well-Known Member
Of course if nothing changes then it may suggest that the underlying problem is not hypogonadism. If it is hypogonadism then a more likely scenario with TRT is that some symptoms improve, some don't, and new ones may develop. This shouldn't be a surprise when the treatment itself can affect more than 20 other hormones. Talk on the Internet is cheap, but the controlled studies point to a relatively low threshold for serum testosterone needed to resolve low T-induced issues with libido and ED; higher levels gave no additional benefit in these areas.

Among those who believe they need very high levels to do well, how many have actually spent significant time trying a range of physiological levels? Certainly very few who use weekly injections of TC or TE, given the large peak-trough variations seen with typical formulations. This is one of the selling points of Xyosted: you can achieve decent stability with weekly injections.
I am not seeing the magic in Xyosted either. All it is is testosterone enanthhate with no BA or BB. It comes in pre-loaded doses which make it terribly over priced. However, I do prefer enenthate over cypionate.
XYOSTED injection is available as 0.5 mL of a sterile, preservative-free and nonpyrogenic, clear, colorless to yellow solution containing testosterone enanthate. It is supplied in a single-dose syringe assembled in an autoinjector for subcutaneous administration. XYOSTED is available in three dosage strengths:​
50 mg/0.5 mL​
75 mg/0.5 mL​
100 mg/0.5 mL​
@Cataceous you know I agree with you that anyone that need to take larger doses should not just jump right into it and have seen that smaller doses are not enough. I am certainly not a "more is better" type guy. This all unfortunately takes time. Correcting HCT issues from taking too much takes some time too.

Like I said, I know Lipshultz has a few patients on larger doses and they are doing fine with his supervision. This guy has dome more research than most and is a true expert in TRT. So I will never doubt his methods. The law of individuality is alive and many of us have proven the bell curve is not for all of us because all of are not average. I prove this every time I try to get in my own car.

I have certainly solved my issues only because I went back to what I know and did not follow my doctor's advice. My doctor has been in practice for 35 years, maybe 19 year prescribing TRT. I have 44 years of successful use behind me. Thank goodness he listens to what I tell him so we can all learn together. At my age, I respond very well to TU.
 

Cataceous

Super Moderator
I am not seeing the magic in Xyosted either. All it is is testosterone enanthhate with no BA or BB. It comes in pre-loaded doses which make it terribly over priced. However, I do prefer enenthate over cypionate.
...
I agree, and was certainly a skeptic of Xyosted from the start. However, I think we have benefited from the research involved, which demonstrated conclusively that subcutaneous injections are safe and effective. In addition, I think there are those who don't want to inject more often than weekly, yet who have problems because of the oscillations. If testosterone undecanoate is not available then Xyosted is a possible solution. There are also a number of guys who have a phobia about injections, yet seem to do fine with an auto-injector. So while Xyosted is not a product you or I need, it does have a place in the TRT market.
 

BigTex

Well-Known Member
I just have to post this statement by Dr. John Crisler.

Some hyper-respond to a given initial dose, others show hardly any bump in serum T levels on same. Yet when you switch to a different delivery system, on initial dosing, they may convert to supraphysiologic androgen levels. The same is true of the subjective benefits from TRT. I have patients who love testosterone gel because it successfully treated their ED (the expected outcome because of dramatically increased DHT production), others get more from IM testosterone cypionate. My experience thus far has taught me two lessons: (1) You don’t know how a patient will react to a given dose/system until you try and (2) NOTHING surprises me anymore. The question of which testosterone delivery system is to be tried first (IM or transdermal) is one which brings much confusion amongst beginning practitioners of TRT.​
Even though this was written a few years back, Crisler understood some people respond to medication differently than others and this one size fits all treating numbers is not the answer. I know my doctor was surprised when he started me out at 150mg/test cyp/every 10 days and I came back with a T level of 2103 and HCT at 69.

More....
There simply is no way to predict how a particular patient will respond—not Medical History (i.e. number or severity of symptoms), body weight, baseline hormone levels, even anabolic steroid history. I have had very slight gentlemen barely elevate on 100mg of test cyp per week, and massively muscled former steroid athletes who went to nearly two times the top of “normal” range on the same dosage (they had similar baselines). Likewise, one man may see only a modest increase in DHT on 5gms of Testim/Androgel, another may become quite supraphysiologic on same.​
How about this statement.....

No such thing as normal

With hormone testing Crisler says it is just as important to understand what normal range is not as it is to understand what normal range is.
They pool all men and book-end two standard deviations – so it includes all of the top two and a half percent and the bottom two and a half percent, for all men. Crisler insists that’s actually ridiculous because we are not the same. He says the problem when you apply traditional science epidemiology to numbers is that all men are not alike – everyone has their own sweet spots.
Crisler says there is a quantum nature to endocrinology. You can have numbers which are in completely normal range, but you can have all the symptoms of hypogonadism. However he has to treat the treating living, breathing human beings in front of him, not the numbers on the paper. Equally he notes about hormone testing that hormone levels are fluctuating all the time, and you really don’t know where on that roller-coaster you happen to catch the levels.​
Crisler gives the example of a guy who’s naturally living at 1200, where his normal testosterone is supposed to be – and he finds himself at 600. He’s still well within normal range, but he has the symptoms of low testosterone because now he only has half the testosterone his body was meant to run on.​
I am starting to wonder how some here would have responded to Dr. Crisler's advice when IMHO, @RobRoy has pretty well be treated like he has never treated a patient and is giving almost the same advice? After sitting back and observing things for a while, I am flattered that a medical doctor would take their time to post here and share their knowledge. Especially in an industry where professional knowledge is needed so badly.
 
Last edited:

BigTex

Well-Known Member
I agree, and was certainly a skeptic of Xyosted from the start. However, I think we have benefited from the research involved, which demonstrated conclusively that subcutaneous injections are safe and effective. In addition, I think there are those who don't want to inject more often than weekly, yet who have problems because of the oscillations. If testosterone undecanoate is not available then Xyosted is a possible solution. There are also a number of guys who have a phobia about injections, yet seem to do fine with an auto-injector. So while Xyosted is not a product you or I need, it does have a place in the TRT market.
@Cataceous I have a huge amount of respect for you as well. You can debate and give your opinion without making any personal attacks.

Xyosted, while they have contributed to research, has been developed and sold in UG markets for a few years now. They have not created magic. Again, this industry is still in it infancy. We need to get doctors and patients to quit paying so much attention to statistics/numbers and pay more attention to how they feel and how the rest of their blood works looks. Again, it makes no sense to me that medical science lowered the testosterone bar instead of keeping the norms the same and finding out why the averages have dropped, then treat them.

Dr. Crisler has certainly been pushing sub-q injections since just before 2012. He got the idea from Dr. Eugene Shippen who has advocated sub-q injection long before that. Quite a few of us knew sub-q injections were safe and just as effective long before there was research telling us it was. Blood test pretty well proved that. I know i have been doing sub-q since possibly 2012. All I needed was Dr. Crisler's word. Medical science told us only IM injections would work.

I agree that TE is a good option for some and most probable me. However, it up to doctors to write them and insurance companies to fork over the money to cover it. Mine doesn't seem to want to cover test cyp. Xyosted, with GoodRX is $477 at Walgreen for 4 auto injects of 75mg each. In mu humble book, that is damn expensive. TU should be made available for guys like me that want to use it sub-q. I agree with you 100% that all of these products had a place. Again, we all react differently and a patient being able to stick with a prescription is pretty important. The only reason Xyosted can be made with no BA/BB is because it comes in 4 preloaded auto injects. Other wise the chance of it getting bacteria in it would be kind of risky with a 10ml vial. But it is still just testosterone enanthate.
 
Last edited:

FunkOdyssey

Seeker of Wisdom
I agree that TE is a good option for some and most probable me. However, it up to doctors to write them and insurance companies to fork over the money to cover it. Mine doesn't seem to want to cover test cyp. Xyosted, with GoodRX is $477 at Walgreen for 4 auto injects of 75mg each. In mu humble book, that is damn expensive. TU should be made available for guys like me that want to use it sub-q. I agree with you 100% that all of these products had a place. Again, we all react differently and a patient being able to stick with a prescription is pretty important. The only reason Xyosted can be made with no BA/BB is because it comes in 4 preloaded auto injects. Other wise the chance of it getting bacteria in it would be kind of risky with a 10ml vial. But it is still just testosterone enanthate.
Hikma does a very good Xyosted impression for a fraction of the price in a 5 ml vial. Same ester, same sesame oil, tiny bit of chlorobutanol at 0.5% as preservative, safe for people that react poorly to BB/BA like myself, equally non-irritating as Xyosted for SC injection. Liquid gold in my book.
 

Systemlord

Member
There are people who get great results on very low doses (me) and those who need many times more to get the same response.
If I could handle sustained 425-450 ng/dL on daily injections, this would be optimal for me. The only thing is, sustained levels suppresses my hepcidin and crushes my ferritin fast! On Jatenzo, I require higher peaks to maintain an average or midpoint of 425-489 ng/dL and similar response to therapy.

I'm hypersensitive to vitamin D, vitamin C, B12, caffeine, alcohol and many other things.
 

Charliebizz

Well-Known Member
Amen @Charliebizz! If doctors were able to get this TRT treatment down correctly, forums like this would not exist and we would have a whole lot of satisfied men posting here. It is discouraging to see so many men complaining about how they fill and wanting advice. Yet 99% of us are going to doctors where this advice should be coming from. Like I said earlier, TRT is in its infancy. There is very little research and we are just starting to admit using anabolic steroids is not going to kill you. I have a colleague name Dr. Jose Antonio. He published a research study quite a few years back where he said, there have been over 50 million people who used anabolic steroids and to date, not one death has ever been show to be caused by anabolic steroids. He said if they were as deadly we we believed the streets would be littered with dead steroid users. So what does our government do but criminalize steroid users. Had medical science continues with research on these drugs and not stopped in 1989, we might have a lot more informed doctors. Many are still afraid to even prescribe testosterone for fear of reprisal from the DEA. Instead we have 50-60 years worth the athletes who have been using anabolic steroids and have a much greater knowledge of their use than most of our doctors. Point in case, SWALL (Dr, Crisler) hung out on bodybuilder forums for years to learn what they knew.

Has anyone bothered looking at any of @RobRoy references he has posted? I have had a few private conversations with the doctor and now know who he really is and have earned a great amount of respect for him. He is not all about making money and had spent quite a bit of time researching every aspect of TRT. Not one time has he asked me to be one of his patients. IMHO, he is honestly trying to help. He reminds me of Dr. Crisler, for a long time people shunned him but he passed on information and never hustled any of the boards for patients. He honestly wanted men to feel better without negative health effects. I find it awfully odd that there are a few legitimate doctors including Dr. Lipshultz who are all saying the same thing but being ignored here. Yet we all come here for information.

@Charliebizz I have a lot of respect for your postings and had no idea you were such a veteran of TRT.
What sucks for me is I have absolutely no writing and grammar skills. I wasn’t much a “school” guy. Always been into working with my hands. I do have common sense and street smarts. And although the human body is very complex I look at it similar as I look at the machines I work with for a living. Or cars that I used to work on.

I have a decent amount of knowledge in the trt world however I have a really hard time articulating my thoughts down on text or paper. It frustrates me because I feel like I can never get my true thoughts out correctly. That said. I’ve always been super cautious with trt. And my labs still aren’t even crazy. I’ve been keeping my tt around 800 and ft 20. I honestly feel I have room to bump it up. But I’m also already using a lot of cream to get to those numbers. And even though I believe Rob roy is mostly correct on high serum levels of dht not being an issue. I still do worry that maybe it could cause issues in the future. But at the end of the day wouldn’t these high numbers lead to some sort of side effect right out of the gate ? I have zero symptoms of high dht. I just firmly believe that serum levels of hormones aren’t showing the whole picture unless they are down right low. But I’ve seen way to many men with “good” natural levels but still have every symptom of low t, feel better when they get numbers up.
 

Charliebizz

Well-Known Member
Of course if nothing changes then it may suggest that the underlying problem is not hypogonadism. If it is hypogonadism then a more likely scenario with TRT is that some symptoms improve, some don't, and new ones may develop. This shouldn't be a surprise when the treatment itself can affect more than 20 other hormones. Talk on the Internet is cheap, but the controlled studies point to a relatively low threshold for serum testosterone needed to resolve low T-induced issues with libido and ED; higher levels gave no additional benefit in these areas.

Among those who believe they need very high levels to do well, how many have actually spent significant time trying a range of physiological levels? Certainly very few who use weekly injections of TC or TE, given the large peak-trough variations seen with typical formulations. This is one of the selling points of Xyosted: you can achieve decent stability with weekly injections.
But again to many variables even with the controlled studies. You really don’t know how bad any of these men felt before treatment. And what one man considers a success is another man’s failure.

Testing for hormones isn’t the same as taking an rbc measurement. It’s great we know how much testosterone is in the blood. But we have no idea how much of that is getting into the cells. We still don’t fully understand what shbg does.

If everyone was right then all low shbg would feel amazing on trt. Yet they seem to be the ones with the most issues. Blood testing is so flawed for hormones it’s not even funny.

Have you ever been on a thyroid forum and seen how many people were told they were fine. Or just given t4. Then they get on a Combo t3/t4 drug and jack numbers up above range and finally start to feel better ???

And to add to big Tex comment before in other countries testosterone is sold over counter and these people aren’t dropping dead in record numbers. You’re a brilliant guy. But this obsession with studies that are so flawed is blinding you.
 

jmbb

Member
But I’ve seen way to many men with “good” natural levels but still have every symptom of low t, feel better when they get numbers up.
The rebuttal you're going to get to this is something like "of course you feel good when testosterone is at 'supraphysiological' levels", and "if you need to go that high you're masking symptoms of something else."

But the "something else" is never explained by the people who are vehemently against moderately higher doses, and this is the exact mindset I bought into that led me down many years of feeling hypogonadal on low doses and looking for non-existent deficiencies in vitamins, minerals, other hormones, etc.
 

Charliebizz

Well-Known Member
The rebuttal you're going to get to this is something like "of course you feel good when testosterone is at 'supraphysiological' levels", and "if you need to go that high you're masking symptoms of something else."

But the "something else" is never explained by the people who are vehemently against moderately higher doses, and this is the exact mindset I bought into that led me down many years of feeling hypogonadal on low doses and looking for non-existent deficiencies in vitamins, minerals, other hormones, etc.
Exactly my friend. I spent thousands I mean thousands of dollars seeing every dr under sun to get to bottom of my issues. Tried every supplement. Every “restart” protocol from clomid to Triptorelin. Tried thyroid replacement in every form. Cortisol replacement you name it. I tried the lowest doses possible and was chasing my tail. Till I finally went on the cream and keep my numbers up at the top of range. I no longer have the cold intolerance that plagued me for years. I have great sex drive, libido I don’t feel like I’m gonna die the day after a workout. The list goes on. It’s not a panacea. But I feel like what I assume a normal 41 year old male would feel like. I’m not a reckless person at all. This has been a 17 year process and it was simple as running a little higer dose then most and using a “outside the box” place to apply a different delivery method then most. People used to shit on the cream and called guys crazy for putting it on the nuts. And “your dht is too high”. But why do I feel good with absolutely no side effects, great labs and great vitals ?
 

Cataceous

Super Moderator
...
Have you ever been on a thyroid forum and seen how many people were told they were fine. Or just given t4. Then they get on a Combo t3/t4 drug and jack numbers up above range and finally start to feel better ??? ...
Glad you mentioned this example. I would bet money that raising fT3 over the long haul reduces life expectancy. Maybe it's worth it, but don't you think informed consent is essential? I don't see enough of this latter, which applies to high testosterone too. The doctors promoting excess blithely claim no risk when they actually do not know.

And to add to big Tex comment before in other countries testosterone is sold over counter and these people aren’t dropping dead in record numbers. You’re a brilliant guy. But this obsession with studies that are so flawed is blinding you.
How do you know life expectancy is not reduced? Without a careful accounting who is going to notice a few years reduction in average longevity of the cohort? Nobody, which leads to empty assertions that there is none. That's what studies are about. It's hardly an obsession to demand rigorous scientific support for such hypotheses. You seem to be calling studies flawed without even reading them. Why not get specific and identify the studies and flaws so we can discuss them?

The rebuttal you're going to get to this is something like "of course you feel good when testosterone is at 'supraphysiological' levels", and "if you need to go that high you're masking symptoms of something else."

But the "something else" is never explained by the people who are vehemently against moderately higher doses, and this is the exact mindset I bought into that led me down many years of feeling hypogonadal on low doses and looking for non-existent deficiencies in vitamins, minerals, other hormones, etc.
There are some TRT-related hypotheses for the "something else" that are mentioned above: unnatural variation in serum testosterone or disruption of other hormones. In any case, yours is a typical misrepresentation of my position. The vehemence is directed against starting new patients at high levels and then mishandling the symptoms of excess that often result.

By the way, define "moderately higher". Is 50% above top-end natural production moderate? 100%?
 

Charliebizz

Well-Known Member
Glad you mentioned this example. I would bet money that raising fT3 over the long haul reduces life expectancy. Maybe it's worth it, but don't you think informed consent is essential? I don't see enough of this latter, which applies to high testosterone too. The doctors promoting excess blithely claim no risk when they actually do not know.
You betting money isnt very scientific is it ? Drs aren’t telling men when they put them on statins and Finasteride to name a few that it’s going to severely diminish quality of life. We can name hundreds of drugs drs prescribe like candy that they do not warn patients of issues they can cause. I’ve been prescribed ssri like candy without ever being warned of a side effect. You are just so stuck on this “do no harm” thing with testosterone but you’re willing to give all this other bullshit modern medicine pushes a pass ? Not to call you out and get in an argument with you but look at all the shit you have experimented with in your health journey. Have you ever given higher t levels a shot. With out all the ancillary drugs you’ve tried ? Maybe that’s all you would need to feel well. Or maybe you shouldn’t be on trt at all if you’re so worried about having to take all these other things to try and keep your Hpta somewhat intact.

At some point people have to be responsible for yourself’s . And if you still believe anything the medical establishment says, with out doing your own research and being your own advocate, I don’t know what to tell you. Especially after the whole covid mess. I think most men know that taking anything has its risks. But what we do know without the shadow of a doubt having low t and tons of symptoms is very detrimental to our health. Long term.
 

Charliebizz

Well-Known Member
By the way, define "moderately higher". Is 50% above top-end natural production moderate? 100%?
You are so stuck on “natural production” when we take trt it’s far from natural. Serious question. Do you believe that endogenous levels vs exogenous levels are identical and metabolized exactly the same ? Do you think that the Hpta being shut down can lead to people need more t to feel better to overcome said shutdown vs natural?
 

jmbb

Member
The vehemence is directed against starting new patients at high levels and then mishandling the symptoms of excess that often result.
While I wasn't referring to you in particular, I don't really see much of an argument for starting people off at high levels either, and I certainly never said that.

The issue I see is people who are too stubborn to accept the fact that nearly all men on successful protocols are not strictly attempting to adhere to the middle of laboratory ranges 24/7 or mimic natural production, or using doses that would strictly be considered in line with physiological production. I would argue that 99+ percent of men are on successful TRT protocols that would be considered "supraphysiological" if we are using daily endogenous milligram production as a metric.
By the way, define "moderately higher". Is 50% above top-end natural production moderate? 100%?
I won't strictly define it with a percentage based on natural production, because this makes many assumptions, and strict definitions are part of the issue of this mindset in the first place. But as a rough range for discussion's sake, on certain forums, anything above 100-120mg per week of enanthate/cypionate up to 200mg is considered a moderate/high TRT dose before it starts getting more into the performance enhancement side (this range again is arguable based on many factors).
 
Last edited:

jmbb

Member
You are so stuck on “natural production” when we take trt it’s far from natural. Serious question. Do you believe that endogenous levels vs exogenous levels are identical and metabolized exactly the same ? Do you think that the Hpta being shut down can lead to people need more t to feel better to overcome said shutdown vs natural?
I've had this same thought as well. There is no such thing as mimicking natural production while using any form of exogenous testosterone unless the dose is so low and/or so many ancillary drugs are added on that there is still production of GNRH - in which case, you probably don't need the testosterone to get to roughly the same serum level in the first place. Cream/test suspension isn't natural either.

And if you're using injectables/blends daily to try to imitate what the body does naturally, are you going to inject 0.5-1mg of test suspension if you engaged in an activity that would boost a natural male's testosterone? Would you intentionally inject less if you got a poor night sleep or drank the night before? It's not realistic or practical.
 
Buy Lab Tests Online
Defy Medical TRT clinic

Sponsors

enclomiphene
nelson vergel coaching for men
Discounted Labs
TRT in UK Balance my hormones
Testosterone books nelson vergel
Register on ExcelMale.com
Trimix HCG Offer Excelmale
Thumos USA men's mentoring and coaching
Testosterone TRT HRT Doctor Near Me

Online statistics

Members online
1
Guests online
7
Total visitors
8

Latest posts

bodybuilder test discounted labs
Top