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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
Latest labs 5/21/14
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<blockquote data-quote="Vettester Chris" data-source="post: 8637" data-attributes="member: 696"><p>Tom, as noted in my previous post, your ferritin is way too low, and iron serum is suboptimal. Like I had mentioned, get your TIBC to make sure iron will bind adequately as you explore some form of elemental iron supplementation. </p><p></p><p>Cortisol has been mentioned a couple times now, and I would personally try to make that happen sooner than later. The 4x saliva panel is the gold standard with many of the leading physicians like Dr. Lam. Seeing the circadian profile with your cortisol levels throughout the entire day will be very beneficial when looking at the broader picture of your entire program. Again, this is one of the KEY variables with the thyroid and getting T3 to effectively work in the cells of the body, and helping keep Reverse T3 levels in a normal ratio with T3. STTM has TONS of information on this, and you will find a lot of supportive and relevant information with Dr. Lam and Dr. Rind.</p><p></p><p>Will keep an eye out for your future labs. BTW, as Nelson mentioned, the lipid profile needs fasting, and glucose will usually fall in that category as well. In fact, in that West Virginia Medical Journal fasting study on TSH that Nelson posted, you could probably contribute the variance to glucose, as glucose would promote ATP production, thus increased productivity of free T3. That's my theory anyways on why fasting would cause a deviation in TSH, but possibly there are further studies that would shed more light.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Vettester Chris, post: 8637, member: 696"] Tom, as noted in my previous post, your ferritin is way too low, and iron serum is suboptimal. Like I had mentioned, get your TIBC to make sure iron will bind adequately as you explore some form of elemental iron supplementation. Cortisol has been mentioned a couple times now, and I would personally try to make that happen sooner than later. The 4x saliva panel is the gold standard with many of the leading physicians like Dr. Lam. Seeing the circadian profile with your cortisol levels throughout the entire day will be very beneficial when looking at the broader picture of your entire program. Again, this is one of the KEY variables with the thyroid and getting T3 to effectively work in the cells of the body, and helping keep Reverse T3 levels in a normal ratio with T3. STTM has TONS of information on this, and you will find a lot of supportive and relevant information with Dr. Lam and Dr. Rind. Will keep an eye out for your future labs. BTW, as Nelson mentioned, the lipid profile needs fasting, and glucose will usually fall in that category as well. In fact, in that West Virginia Medical Journal fasting study on TSH that Nelson posted, you could probably contribute the variance to glucose, as glucose would promote ATP production, thus increased productivity of free T3. That's my theory anyways on why fasting would cause a deviation in TSH, but possibly there are further studies that would shed more light. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
Latest labs 5/21/14
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