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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Has anyone tried this method? Try it if you don't feel good
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<blockquote data-quote="madman" data-source="post: 196607" data-attributes="member: 13851"><p>This is common when starting trt let alone tweaking a protocol (increasing T dose) T levels/dopamine are rising and hormones are in FLUX during the weeks leading up until blood levels have stabilized.</p><p></p><p>The first <strong>4-6 weeks</strong> <strong>(flux/<u>adjustment</u>)</strong> means nothing when looking at the overall bigger picture.</p><p></p><p>It will take the body another <strong>2-3 months to <u>adapt</u> to those new levels</strong> and this is the critical time period when one should gauge how they truly feel overall on such protocol (dose T/injection frequency).</p><p></p><p>Other things to keep in mind are not only steady-state 24/7 but the fact that most are running absurdly high trough TT/FT levels which the body would nor could ever produce endogenously.</p><p></p><p>Excess T levels steady-state most likely have some negative effects on neurotransmitters let alone can cause many other sides for some individuals.</p><p></p><p>Top it off that your hpta is shutdown.</p><p></p><p>Unfortunately, there is much more involved when it comes to libido/ed.....multifaceted.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="madman, post: 196607, member: 13851"] This is common when starting trt let alone tweaking a protocol (increasing T dose) T levels/dopamine are rising and hormones are in FLUX during the weeks leading up until blood levels have stabilized. The first [B]4-6 weeks[/B] [B](flux/[U]adjustment[/U])[/B] means nothing when looking at the overall bigger picture. It will take the body another [B]2-3 months to [U]adapt[/U] to those new levels[/B] and this is the critical time period when one should gauge how they truly feel overall on such protocol (dose T/injection frequency). Other things to keep in mind are not only steady-state 24/7 but the fact that most are running absurdly high trough TT/FT levels which the body would nor could ever produce endogenously. Excess T levels steady-state most likely have some negative effects on neurotransmitters let alone can cause many other sides for some individuals. Top it off that your hpta is shutdown. Unfortunately, there is much more involved when it comes to libido/ed.....multifaceted. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Has anyone tried this method? Try it if you don't feel good
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