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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
About to start TRT - should I?
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<blockquote data-quote="Pacman" data-source="post: 179018" data-attributes="member: 2450"><p>I don't understand why someone with T levels as high as yours would do TRT. There are a lot of reasons that you could be feeling the way you feel. If you go on TRT, your T levels won't be all that much different than they are now, and you'll shut down your own natural production on top of that. The efficacy of testosterone is measured in ranges, not precise numerical values. So if you have 869 ng/dL right now, and with TRT you get to 1047 ng/dL in 3 months, it's super unlikely that you'll feel any difference. Not to mention having to go do blood tests every 3-6 months, possibly needing AIs, being on this for life. Why be dependent on something external if you likely don't need it? </p><p></p><p>TRT gives you the same hormone you already produce naturally. What will you do once you pass the initial psychosomatic effects you feel now, and see that maybe the cause of your negative physical/mental experiences is something else? (i.e. and for example: could be chemical imbalance of the brain, depression, tumor, nutritional imbalance, etc etc)</p><p></p><p>I am not criticizing you, but I just don't understand why someone in your position would go on TRT. If I was in your position, I certainly wouldn't.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Pacman, post: 179018, member: 2450"] I don't understand why someone with T levels as high as yours would do TRT. There are a lot of reasons that you could be feeling the way you feel. If you go on TRT, your T levels won't be all that much different than they are now, and you'll shut down your own natural production on top of that. The efficacy of testosterone is measured in ranges, not precise numerical values. So if you have 869 ng/dL right now, and with TRT you get to 1047 ng/dL in 3 months, it's super unlikely that you'll feel any difference. Not to mention having to go do blood tests every 3-6 months, possibly needing AIs, being on this for life. Why be dependent on something external if you likely don't need it? TRT gives you the same hormone you already produce naturally. What will you do once you pass the initial psychosomatic effects you feel now, and see that maybe the cause of your negative physical/mental experiences is something else? (i.e. and for example: could be chemical imbalance of the brain, depression, tumor, nutritional imbalance, etc etc) I am not criticizing you, but I just don't understand why someone in your position would go on TRT. If I was in your position, I certainly wouldn't. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
About to start TRT - should I?
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