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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
Extensive Bloodwork After 3 Months on TRT
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<blockquote data-quote="Vettester Chris" data-source="post: 45504" data-attributes="member: 696"><p>Mopes, IMO, I don't think the results should prompt drastic actions, but I think it's worth taking note of things like sleep, caffeine, stress related events, illnesses, ect., anything that could be causing a higher demand on stress (?). </p><p></p><p>The AM profile should be right at the top (top 90%tile), so that's pushing a bit over the reference range. The two mid labs would probably be a bit more in balance towards the middle of the reference range, so again, that confirms there's maybe a bit more of a demand for stress than one might desired. </p><p></p><p>Is there anything right off the top that you can think of that can be attributed with some stress in life? If you're like most of us there should be a few things. Also, just getting some decent amount of exercise and eating healthy can do wonders with how you feel, which improves sleep, ... It all works in a synergistic fashion. </p><p></p><p>You could & should be exploring thyroid hormone treatment, BUT, I think your doctor needs to look closer at your ferritin level before going ALL-IN. Although your iron serum isn't that bad, the binding protein to transport it is quite low. In similar fashion to SHBG, total serum can yield to be quite normal, but the "free serum" can be below par there's not enough binding proteins in the body (SHBG and albumin in this case). </p><p></p><p>If looking at the whole scope of your iron, including TIBC, serum and ferritin (BTW, saturation will always be dividing your iron serum to TIBC (IS/TIBC)), I might speculate to say you are donating blood fairly frequently? Regardless, talk with your physician, as the iron /ferritin subject will play a crucial role with how T3 reaches the cells.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Vettester Chris, post: 45504, member: 696"] Mopes, IMO, I don't think the results should prompt drastic actions, but I think it's worth taking note of things like sleep, caffeine, stress related events, illnesses, ect., anything that could be causing a higher demand on stress (?). The AM profile should be right at the top (top 90%tile), so that's pushing a bit over the reference range. The two mid labs would probably be a bit more in balance towards the middle of the reference range, so again, that confirms there's maybe a bit more of a demand for stress than one might desired. Is there anything right off the top that you can think of that can be attributed with some stress in life? If you're like most of us there should be a few things. Also, just getting some decent amount of exercise and eating healthy can do wonders with how you feel, which improves sleep, ... It all works in a synergistic fashion. You could & should be exploring thyroid hormone treatment, BUT, I think your doctor needs to look closer at your ferritin level before going ALL-IN. Although your iron serum isn't that bad, the binding protein to transport it is quite low. In similar fashion to SHBG, total serum can yield to be quite normal, but the "free serum" can be below par there's not enough binding proteins in the body (SHBG and albumin in this case). If looking at the whole scope of your iron, including TIBC, serum and ferritin (BTW, saturation will always be dividing your iron serum to TIBC (IS/TIBC)), I might speculate to say you are donating blood fairly frequently? Regardless, talk with your physician, as the iron /ferritin subject will play a crucial role with how T3 reaches the cells. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
Extensive Bloodwork After 3 Months on TRT
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