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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
When Testosterone Is Not Enough
Fertility with HCG + SERM? HMG/rhFSH Impossible to get in Australia
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<blockquote data-quote="aneuman" data-source="post: 248931" data-attributes="member: 43264"><p>It's curious, because hCG if one of the few treatments that are FDA approved for male infertility. SERMS are not, by the way, and are used off label.</p><p></p><p><a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4708300/" target="_blank">Medical treatment of male infertility</a></p><p></p><p>From the article above</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]30107[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>The most important thing to understand is that HCG is not "suppressive" in the sense that it will strangle your pretuitary, take it hostage, and force it not to produce LH/FSH. It will simply bypass the need for the pituitary to produce LH and as a result, the pituitary will produce less LH. If this is maintained for a long time, there might be some permanent effect.</p><p></p><p>Enclomiphene citrate (whether pure or as part of clomid) will block such an effect on the pituitary and fool it into believing there's not enough estradiol, so it will try to increase the production of LH to increase testosterone to bring estradiol to normal levels</p><p></p><p>I'm currently using low dose HCG and Enclomipohene citrate and both LH and FSH are at the top of the normal range, and I'm 60 btw.</p><p></p><p>Good luck.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="aneuman, post: 248931, member: 43264"] It's curious, because hCG if one of the few treatments that are FDA approved for male infertility. SERMS are not, by the way, and are used off label. [URL='https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4708300/']Medical treatment of male infertility[/URL] From the article above [ATTACH type="full"]30107[/ATTACH] The most important thing to understand is that HCG is not "suppressive" in the sense that it will strangle your pretuitary, take it hostage, and force it not to produce LH/FSH. It will simply bypass the need for the pituitary to produce LH and as a result, the pituitary will produce less LH. If this is maintained for a long time, there might be some permanent effect. Enclomiphene citrate (whether pure or as part of clomid) will block such an effect on the pituitary and fool it into believing there's not enough estradiol, so it will try to increase the production of LH to increase testosterone to bring estradiol to normal levels I'm currently using low dose HCG and Enclomipohene citrate and both LH and FSH are at the top of the normal range, and I'm 60 btw. Good luck. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
When Testosterone Is Not Enough
Fertility with HCG + SERM? HMG/rhFSH Impossible to get in Australia
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