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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
2 Months After Starting TRT
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<blockquote data-quote="Vettester Chris" data-source="post: 6863" data-attributes="member: 696"><p>OP, your thyroid numbers unfortunately don't give us any true picture of what's taking place. We need reference ranges for starters, plus Free T3, Reverse T3, and antibodies TPO & TpAg. Presuming that cortisol lab is a morning serum? The ideal cortisol test would be getting a 4x saliva, followed with a circadian profile, scaled in contrast to the top and bottom values of the reference range. Iron serum, TIBC, ferritin, magnesium, B12, D3 are others just to name a few. If your cortisol is indeed elevated and over productive, you could be experiencing issues with T4 conversion to T3, excessive RT3, which in turn will reflect poor T3 activity at the cellular level.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Vettester Chris, post: 6863, member: 696"] OP, your thyroid numbers unfortunately don't give us any true picture of what's taking place. We need reference ranges for starters, plus Free T3, Reverse T3, and antibodies TPO & TpAg. Presuming that cortisol lab is a morning serum? The ideal cortisol test would be getting a 4x saliva, followed with a circadian profile, scaled in contrast to the top and bottom values of the reference range. Iron serum, TIBC, ferritin, magnesium, B12, D3 are others just to name a few. If your cortisol is indeed elevated and over productive, you could be experiencing issues with T4 conversion to T3, excessive RT3, which in turn will reflect poor T3 activity at the cellular level. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
2 Months After Starting TRT
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