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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="tropicaldaze1950" data-source="post: 196730" data-attributes="member: 13651"><p>Not rare, IMO. And the opioid analogy isn't philosophically equivalent. </p><p></p><p>I consulted a psychiatrist who has been using high doses of t3 for years for patients who have unipolar depression and bipolar depression. Some patients need 100, up to 200 mcg, daily. Dr. Peter Whybrow, chief of psychiatry at UCLA has been researching and using high dose t4 in treatment resistant bipolar patients for decades. </p><p></p><p>Symptom resolution, irrespective of dose, is valid. Referring to thyroid dosing, most doctors are afraid to titrate t3 or t4 or desiccated to supraphysiologic doses because what they've been taught is erroneous. Dr. Tammas Kelly, whom I consulted, cites the research to counter all the fears and misinformation surrounding high dose thyroid therapy. The only study of supraphysiologic testosterone was dosed up to 600 mg, weekly, and though it was a small study, no ill effects were manifested. There needs to be more studies, both ultra low dose and ultra high dose. And, again, I don't believe that thyroid or androgen resistance are rare.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tropicaldaze1950, post: 196730, member: 13651"] Not rare, IMO. And the opioid analogy isn't philosophically equivalent. I consulted a psychiatrist who has been using high doses of t3 for years for patients who have unipolar depression and bipolar depression. Some patients need 100, up to 200 mcg, daily. Dr. Peter Whybrow, chief of psychiatry at UCLA has been researching and using high dose t4 in treatment resistant bipolar patients for decades. Symptom resolution, irrespective of dose, is valid. Referring to thyroid dosing, most doctors are afraid to titrate t3 or t4 or desiccated to supraphysiologic doses because what they've been taught is erroneous. Dr. Tammas Kelly, whom I consulted, cites the research to counter all the fears and misinformation surrounding high dose thyroid therapy. The only study of supraphysiologic testosterone was dosed up to 600 mg, weekly, and though it was a small study, no ill effects were manifested. There needs to be more studies, both ultra low dose and ultra high dose. And, again, I don't believe that thyroid or androgen resistance are rare. [/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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