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Thyroid, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, DHEA, etc
Thyroid, DHEA, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, etc
Hypopituitarism and how to deal with it
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<blockquote data-quote="Vettester Chris" data-source="post: 16834" data-attributes="member: 696"><p>1. With what you have presented, I personally don't think Clomid will hold. Clomid's purpose would be to stimulate GnRH - LH secretion, and thereafter you would want it to sustain. If your HPTA was suppressed from AAS (test, Nor19, etc), then it's a possibility. With an andomea in play, which sounds like the culprit, I would suspect any SERM you try won't be successful. If the tumor is not the culprit, then maybe Clomid stands a chance.</p><p></p><p>2. Yes, you can always implement selenium, iodine, and do the healthy things that will help your thyroid. The first step though will be getting the adrenals figured out, as it is necessary for T3 reaching the cells and promoting ATP.</p><p></p><p>3. Definitely focus on the adrenals as mentioned above. Agree with supplements (Vitamin C, Magnesium, D3, etc.). Being you are dealing with hypopituitary, I don't know how effective any of this can be. If it was just stress related, causing adrenal fatigue, then you could look at other options including CT3M. </p><p></p><p>You ask for my suggestion ... My honest, best suggestion I can give you is to do what it takes to get with a physician, who can really get to the root of this for you, and who can take the measures to treat it properly. If your current doctor is stating that your endogenous testosterone is to blame, then that's not the doctor you need to have for this journey. I know most people might not have the resources to do this, I don't know your situation (?). Maybe there are potential physicians in Poland, Germany, or other countries nearby.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Vettester Chris, post: 16834, member: 696"] 1. With what you have presented, I personally don't think Clomid will hold. Clomid's purpose would be to stimulate GnRH - LH secretion, and thereafter you would want it to sustain. If your HPTA was suppressed from AAS (test, Nor19, etc), then it's a possibility. With an andomea in play, which sounds like the culprit, I would suspect any SERM you try won't be successful. If the tumor is not the culprit, then maybe Clomid stands a chance. 2. Yes, you can always implement selenium, iodine, and do the healthy things that will help your thyroid. The first step though will be getting the adrenals figured out, as it is necessary for T3 reaching the cells and promoting ATP. 3. Definitely focus on the adrenals as mentioned above. Agree with supplements (Vitamin C, Magnesium, D3, etc.). Being you are dealing with hypopituitary, I don't know how effective any of this can be. If it was just stress related, causing adrenal fatigue, then you could look at other options including CT3M. You ask for my suggestion ... My honest, best suggestion I can give you is to do what it takes to get with a physician, who can really get to the root of this for you, and who can take the measures to treat it properly. If your current doctor is stating that your endogenous testosterone is to blame, then that's not the doctor you need to have for this journey. I know most people might not have the resources to do this, I don't know your situation (?). Maybe there are potential physicians in Poland, Germany, or other countries nearby. [/QUOTE]
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Thyroid, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, DHEA, etc
Thyroid, DHEA, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, etc
Hypopituitarism and how to deal with it
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