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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
Eric's Labs
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<blockquote data-quote="Vettester Chris" data-source="post: 5121" data-attributes="member: 696"><p>Eric, again, I agree even more with his thinking. I think you were complaining about some lumps or inflammation issues once you started the NDT. Like I said, look at your FT4, which was 100% of range. It's basically bottlenecked, and by adding NDT (this is just my little theory) you are promoting the opportunity for self induced 'Thyroid Storming'. That's a pheonomena where too much thyroid hormone gets built up too fast (review it to see if your symptoms fall inline). It's usually more associated in Graves or other hyperthyroid conditions, but I would imagine the reactions could be similar when thyroxine is already peaked and not moving (as it should), and you administer NDT, which is naturally approx. 4:1 with T4 to T3. Just food for thought ...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Vettester Chris, post: 5121, member: 696"] Eric, again, I agree even more with his thinking. I think you were complaining about some lumps or inflammation issues once you started the NDT. Like I said, look at your FT4, which was 100% of range. It's basically bottlenecked, and by adding NDT (this is just my little theory) you are promoting the opportunity for self induced 'Thyroid Storming'. That's a pheonomena where too much thyroid hormone gets built up too fast (review it to see if your symptoms fall inline). It's usually more associated in Graves or other hyperthyroid conditions, but I would imagine the reactions could be similar when thyroxine is already peaked and not moving (as it should), and you administer NDT, which is naturally approx. 4:1 with T4 to T3. Just food for thought ... [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
Eric's Labs
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