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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Does Shutting Down LH with Testosterone Have Negative Effects?
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<blockquote data-quote="Henry" data-source="post: 84872" data-attributes="member: 2067"><p>I've been on it for so long because it works for me. I've been on injections and Androgel. Both worked very well. No blood donations, no AI's no issues. I have no complaints but I'm not blind to it either. As with any medicine, there is always a side effect. My body has adjusted to it but some people have issues and there are compromises. </p><p></p><p>Also, as we all know here, there are people who have undiagnosed Low T and they are fine (one of my friends that saw Dr. O with me stoped TRT and is back to a 360 or so level. He's just fine. His insurance stopped covering it so he stopped). People need to look at all aspects. We are both in a thread right now where there is a 23 year old man with a 443 T level and the wife and another posted are recommending TRT. Why? Have other things been checked? What about his thyroid? What about his sleep, exercise, diet, etc. Why not find the root of the problem before recommending he jump on TRT? Sometimes, it's a lifestyle change that can cause T levels to jump. What if he has a varicocele? What if he has sleep apnea? 443 is not a bad number. What if he can naturally raise it 100 points without having to get on the needle for the rest of his life? Now, if everything gets checked, he makes the lifestyle changes, etc and he's still at 443, then TRT could be an option, but to recommend TRT, HCG and HMG to a 23 year old with a 443 T level, who is looking to get pregnant, without looking at other factors, is kinda foolish. I know we all love TRT (that's why we're here) but there should be some thought behind it.</p><p></p><p>I never said there were benefits to low T, but there are compromises to TRT, that's the reality. Some people can deal with it and have no problems (like me with a 1300 T level on Androgel with no problems) and some have issues.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Henry, post: 84872, member: 2067"] I've been on it for so long because it works for me. I've been on injections and Androgel. Both worked very well. No blood donations, no AI's no issues. I have no complaints but I'm not blind to it either. As with any medicine, there is always a side effect. My body has adjusted to it but some people have issues and there are compromises. Also, as we all know here, there are people who have undiagnosed Low T and they are fine (one of my friends that saw Dr. O with me stoped TRT and is back to a 360 or so level. He's just fine. His insurance stopped covering it so he stopped). People need to look at all aspects. We are both in a thread right now where there is a 23 year old man with a 443 T level and the wife and another posted are recommending TRT. Why? Have other things been checked? What about his thyroid? What about his sleep, exercise, diet, etc. Why not find the root of the problem before recommending he jump on TRT? Sometimes, it's a lifestyle change that can cause T levels to jump. What if he has a varicocele? What if he has sleep apnea? 443 is not a bad number. What if he can naturally raise it 100 points without having to get on the needle for the rest of his life? Now, if everything gets checked, he makes the lifestyle changes, etc and he's still at 443, then TRT could be an option, but to recommend TRT, HCG and HMG to a 23 year old with a 443 T level, who is looking to get pregnant, without looking at other factors, is kinda foolish. I know we all love TRT (that's why we're here) but there should be some thought behind it. I never said there were benefits to low T, but there are compromises to TRT, that's the reality. Some people can deal with it and have no problems (like me with a 1300 T level on Androgel with no problems) and some have issues. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Does Shutting Down LH with Testosterone Have Negative Effects?
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