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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
When Testosterone Is Not Enough
Going to give No HCG a go.
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<blockquote data-quote="Cataceous" data-source="post: 170365" data-attributes="member: 38109"><p>One problem with this school of thought is that a normal HPTA adjusts testosterone to achieve the desired level of estradiol, so testosterone follows estradiol. Under TRT this feedback is defeated and estradiol is forced to follow testosterone instead. Based on how our bodies normally work it seems as though we should be adjusting our testosterone doses to attain the particular level of free estradiol that's right for us.</p><p></p><p>The addition of hCG can contribute to estrogen problems because it's somewhat unnatural compared to pulsatile LH delivery. HCG has a long half-life and is said to be several times stronger than LH on a per-IU basis. This combination leads to excessive intratesticular aromatization, almost certainly circumventing any attempts by the body to "adjust E2 levels naturally on its own".</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cataceous, post: 170365, member: 38109"] One problem with this school of thought is that a normal HPTA adjusts testosterone to achieve the desired level of estradiol, so testosterone follows estradiol. Under TRT this feedback is defeated and estradiol is forced to follow testosterone instead. Based on how our bodies normally work it seems as though we should be adjusting our testosterone doses to attain the particular level of free estradiol that's right for us. The addition of hCG can contribute to estrogen problems because it's somewhat unnatural compared to pulsatile LH delivery. HCG has a long half-life and is said to be several times stronger than LH on a per-IU basis. This combination leads to excessive intratesticular aromatization, almost certainly circumventing any attempts by the body to "adjust E2 levels naturally on its own". [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
When Testosterone Is Not Enough
Going to give No HCG a go.
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