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Ratbad


This study was done by Dr Lipshultz' team.  He is my urologist and probably the most open minded and progressive TRT researcher out there.  He has 7 fellows who do studies every year. I will be meeting his team next week. My goal is to reanalyze the data to look at T/E2 ratios.


He also did this study with HCG :


Concomitant Intramuscular Human Chorionic Gonadotropin Preserves Spermatogenesis in Men Undergoing Testosterone Replacement Therapy




Purpose: Testosterone replacement therapy results in decreased serum gonadotropins and  intratesticular testosterone, and  impairs spermatogenesis, leading to azoospermia in  40%  of patients. However, intratesticular  testosterone can  be maintained during testosterone replacement therapy with co-administration of low dose human chorionic gonadotropin, which  may  support continued spermatogenesis in patients on testosterone replacement therapy.


Materials and Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the  records of hypogonadal men  treated with testosterone replacement therapy and  concomitant low dose  human chorionic gonadotropin. Testosterone replacement consisted of daily  topical gel or weekly intramuscular injection with intramuscular human chorionic gonadotropin (500 IU) every  other day.  Serum and  free testosterone, estradiol, semen parameters and  pregnancy rates were  evaluated before  and  during therapy.


Results: A total of 26 men  with a mean age  of 35.9  years were  included in  the study. Mean follow up  was 6.2 months. Of the men  19 were  treated with injectable testosterone and   7  were  treated with transdermal gel.  Mean serum hormone levels   before   vs  during treatment  were   testosterone  207.2   vs  1,055.5  ng/dl (p <0.0001), free testosterone 8.1 vs 20.4 pg/ml  (p = 0.02) and  estradiol 2.2 vs 3.7 pg/ml  (p = 0.11).  Pretreatment semen parameters were  volume 2.9 ml,  density 35.2 million per ml, motility 49.0% and  forward progression 2.3. No differences in semen parameters  were  observed during greater than 1  year of followup. No impact on semen parameters was  observed as  a function of testosterone formulation. No patient became azoospermic during concomitant testosterone replacement and  human chorionic gonadotropin therapy. Nine  of 26 men  contributed to pregnancy with the  partner during followup.


Conclusions: Low dose  human chorionic gonadotropin appears to maintain semen  parameters in hypogonadal men  on testosterone replacement therapy. Concurrent testosterone replacement and  human  chorionic gonadotropin use  may preserve fertility in hypogonadal males who desire fertility preservation while  on testosterone replacement therapy.


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