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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
6 Months in - TRT a Complete Fail - Need Advice
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<blockquote data-quote="Blackhawk" data-source="post: 91783" data-attributes="member: 16042"><p>Editing out all the verbiage, your stated protocol changes in 6 months::</p><p></p><p>-Clomid monotherapy</p><p></p><p>-Added Anastrazole </p><p></p><p>-Switched to T injections, HCG and Anastrazole</p><p></p><p>-Discontinued T, continued HCG</p><p></p><p>-Added T again</p><p></p><p>-Discontinued T, stayed on HCG and AI</p><p></p><p>In addition you changed doses and dosing frequencies.</p><p></p><p>And are falsely basing estrogen aspects on the wrong test.</p><p></p><p></p><p>You endocrine system has got the be mightily confused. </p><p></p><p>You have not given yourself much opportunity to actually attribute cause and effect of any of your protocol changes. To reach stable state with any single treatment takes 6 weeks, and changing multiple variables complicates interpreting results.</p><p></p><p>A few examples of things working against what you have tried to accomplish:</p><p></p><p>-If you start taking T, you are going to have a honeymoon period where you feel great for a while until your LH drops and your endogenous T production drops off, after which you may feel like crap and dosage may need to be adjusted. </p><p></p><p>-If you just stop at that point and discontinue taking T, it takes quite a while for your natural production to kick back in... so you will feel like crap. If you jump to some other idea to try, you never even gave yourself a chance to recover from stopping.</p><p></p><p>-But you started and stopped a couple times in a short time span. Your body never had the chance to stabilize either on or off the sustanon.</p><p></p><p>-Anastrazole is powerful, and if you crashed you E2 somewhere in this period, you may have a long recovery... again treating based on the wrong test can hurt you, and Drs who prescribe an AI when misreading the non sensitive test pretty routinely crash their patients E2</p><p></p><p>Seems you created your own roller coaster.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Blackhawk, post: 91783, member: 16042"] Editing out all the verbiage, your stated protocol changes in 6 months:: -Clomid monotherapy -Added Anastrazole -Switched to T injections, HCG and Anastrazole -Discontinued T, continued HCG -Added T again -Discontinued T, stayed on HCG and AI In addition you changed doses and dosing frequencies. And are falsely basing estrogen aspects on the wrong test. You endocrine system has got the be mightily confused. You have not given yourself much opportunity to actually attribute cause and effect of any of your protocol changes. To reach stable state with any single treatment takes 6 weeks, and changing multiple variables complicates interpreting results. A few examples of things working against what you have tried to accomplish: -If you start taking T, you are going to have a honeymoon period where you feel great for a while until your LH drops and your endogenous T production drops off, after which you may feel like crap and dosage may need to be adjusted. -If you just stop at that point and discontinue taking T, it takes quite a while for your natural production to kick back in... so you will feel like crap. If you jump to some other idea to try, you never even gave yourself a chance to recover from stopping. -But you started and stopped a couple times in a short time span. Your body never had the chance to stabilize either on or off the sustanon. -Anastrazole is powerful, and if you crashed you E2 somewhere in this period, you may have a long recovery... again treating based on the wrong test can hurt you, and Drs who prescribe an AI when misreading the non sensitive test pretty routinely crash their patients E2 Seems you created your own roller coaster. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
6 Months in - TRT a Complete Fail - Need Advice
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