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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
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<blockquote data-quote="Dr Justin Saya MD" data-source="post: 54277" data-attributes="member: 12687"><p>Hi Shanem - glad you have had your PE and labs taken care of. Will look forward to you joining the crew!</p><p></p><p>Here's my response to MANY similar progesterone questions recently:</p><p></p><p>Since LabCorp inexplicably changed their progesterone reference range about 3 weeks ago to basically zero (previously 0.0 -1.2 changed to 0.0 - 0.1) virtually ALL patients have shown "high" for progesterone on their LabCorp reports simply due to the ridiculously low reference range. I'll be sending LabCorp execs a thank you card for Christmas to show my appreciation for the lost productivity attributed to having to explain this very fact to every single patient with NORMAL progesterone levels.</p><p></p><p>You're correct to have a healthy concern for anything that shows "high" on your lab report, but rest assured that your progesterone level is perfectly normal, if not low-normal, at 0.2. It's an illusion based on the new falsely low reference range for progesterone from LabCorp.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dr Justin Saya MD, post: 54277, member: 12687"] Hi Shanem - glad you have had your PE and labs taken care of. Will look forward to you joining the crew! Here's my response to MANY similar progesterone questions recently: Since LabCorp inexplicably changed their progesterone reference range about 3 weeks ago to basically zero (previously 0.0 -1.2 changed to 0.0 - 0.1) virtually ALL patients have shown "high" for progesterone on their LabCorp reports simply due to the ridiculously low reference range. I'll be sending LabCorp execs a thank you card for Christmas to show my appreciation for the lost productivity attributed to having to explain this very fact to every single patient with NORMAL progesterone levels. You're correct to have a healthy concern for anything that shows "high" on your lab report, but rest assured that your progesterone level is perfectly normal, if not low-normal, at 0.2. It's an illusion based on the new falsely low reference range for progesterone from LabCorp. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
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