I'll try to find them, but due to various upheavals in life (being made homeless), I lost a load of results. But I remember my rT3 being quite high and everything else was within range. This was about 2 or 3 years ago I had the tests done.
Looking for advice re dosing.
Over the last few years, I've had (private) bloods that suggest thyroid isn't doing too well, and a load of thyroid related issues (even a private doctor mentioned this when the results came out).
I've got some Tiromel 25 mcg, and looking to do a trial on them...
I've been hearing people mention that if you don't keep taking an AI (ie Arimidex), that you can end up with an E2 rebound, and that you end up with higher levels of E2.
Is this true? How does it work? Does it only apply to Arimidex?
Thanks.
Thank you for this. I'm confused as it mentions estogenic and non estrogenic steriods. Is there a list of what's what? I've been on Sus 250, and also Cypionate. Which group do they fall into?
Yeah, iron is interesting. You also want to look into how the body stops iron entering your body if you have certain diseases, or viruses, as iron can worsen disease/virus as they utilize iron (so become worse).
The other thing to take into consideration, espcially with the standard needles used to inject (say 25G), is the deadspace. There will be some test still in the syringe/needle. So I usually add a bid more to make up for this loss.
Pretty much, yes. Kinda surprised for such a small dosage, plus it helps when working out as more pumped. You can also look up re health benefits of small dose Viagra, so there are other pluses to taking it.
Just googles foods high in TMAO:
Trimethylamine is present in high levels in milk obtained from wheat-fed cows. Choline is present in high amounts in: eggs, liver, kidney, peas, beans, peanuts, soy products, brussels sprouts, broccoli, cabbage, and cauliflower. Trimethylamine N-oxide is present...
I'm on a low dose of viagra (25mg daily), will this affect taking Citrulline? Also, is there a Citrulline that is more bio available, or are they all the same? thanks.
I'm 47 years old, and take 25mg generic viagra daily. It def helps in the bedroom department. Been on TRT for about 3 years, and errections were still bad, so it's probably down to clogged arteries, etc (I've had high cholesterol for years, so changing my diet to mostly vegan).
There are other...
Thank you both, really interesting! Just goes to show how strong Arimidex is in such minute amounts. I'll do 10ml, and dose at 1ml (0.1mg), and see how it goes.
Apologies for replying to an old thread, but 1mg of Arimidex to 2ml of vodka equals 0.05mg per 0.1ml (not 0.125mg as OP stated)?
I'm looking to mix 5ml of vodka with 5mg of Arimidex. So each 0.1ml equals 0.1mg (I think I'm correct?).
No diagnosis at first (I lost my original test results prior to starting, but the doc mentioned it was borderline low).
SHBG was tested, and here are the results:
53.1 nmol/L (Range: 18.3 - 54.1)
Re 125mg Sustanon 250 per week; yes the labs came back with everything within range but on the...
Hi.
Background: Male in mid 40's. Been on TRT (via Dr Savage; a well known UK private TRT consultant). Was on Sustanon 250 (approx 125mg per week) for about 2 years.
Decided to come off it (some issues with hemotocrat which has been sorted out via donating blood, and some aggression esp...
AFAIK, Isn't rT3 made from t4 (converts to rT3 assuming there's issues)? And that considering rT3 is effectivly useless, adding T3 should help things out?
I think you mean adding T4 is useless, as it is converted to rT3.
@Vtail
Glad it worked out in the end!
I think that TRT docs are starting to see the link bewteen the thyroid and low T (one can mimic the other).
Slightly related, but the no 1 thyroid disorder (afaik) is Hashimotos (autoimmune disorder). I've always suspected that I have this, and now don't...
Even though I had a full thyroid panel done a couple of years ago, it kept showing reasonably high levels of rT3 (causes unknown, as there are several possible reasons, ie anemic, low ferritin levels, stress, rapid weight loss can trigger high rT3, etc).
So I recently got hold of Cytomel T3...
I know that if your body isn't getting enough calories (as well as other factors, ie stress, illness, etc), the body produces reverse t3 (rT3), which is detrimental and slows the body down (ie it buggers up your thyroid!).
I see, thanks. I'm gonna be on a small dose of T3 (15 or 25ug daily), to hopefully supplement my thyroid (and not shut it down). See how it goes, but good luck getting it dialled in.
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