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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Low SHBG. EOD vs daily shots. Is their a big difference?
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<blockquote data-quote="Gman86" data-source="post: 140045" data-attributes="member: 15043"><p>I agree, you’re not even pre-diabetic. Your fasting glucose converts to 92mg/dL. Ideal fasting glucose is 70-100, so you are on the high end, and close to the pre-diabetic range, but you’re fine for now.</p><p></p><p>You might, however, be closing in on hypothyroidism. I’m not sure if those are total T3 + T4 values, or free T3 + T4 values, and not sure what ranges go along with the values you posted. Posting values on here without ranges makes it difficult to evaluate labs. I follow an amazing doctor that specializes in the thyroid. His name is Dr. Westin Childs. The reason I say that you might be bordering on hypothyroidism is due to Dr. Childs saying that any TSH over 2 is a clear sign of hypothyroidism. This guy knows hypothyroidism better than anyone else I’ve seen, so if he says that, I tend to believe that he knows what he’s talking about. Just something to consider. Thyroid issues are extremely common. T4 medication is the most commonly prescribed medication in the U.S., and that’s just all the people that have been diagnosed. If doctors were all up on the latest thyroid literature, I bet the amount of thyroid diagnoses would sky rocket. That’s not even counting all the people that have good thyroid labs, but may still be resistant on a cellular level.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Gman86, post: 140045, member: 15043"] I agree, you’re not even pre-diabetic. Your fasting glucose converts to 92mg/dL. Ideal fasting glucose is 70-100, so you are on the high end, and close to the pre-diabetic range, but you’re fine for now. You might, however, be closing in on hypothyroidism. I’m not sure if those are total T3 + T4 values, or free T3 + T4 values, and not sure what ranges go along with the values you posted. Posting values on here without ranges makes it difficult to evaluate labs. I follow an amazing doctor that specializes in the thyroid. His name is Dr. Westin Childs. The reason I say that you might be bordering on hypothyroidism is due to Dr. Childs saying that any TSH over 2 is a clear sign of hypothyroidism. This guy knows hypothyroidism better than anyone else I’ve seen, so if he says that, I tend to believe that he knows what he’s talking about. Just something to consider. Thyroid issues are extremely common. T4 medication is the most commonly prescribed medication in the U.S., and that’s just all the people that have been diagnosed. If doctors were all up on the latest thyroid literature, I bet the amount of thyroid diagnoses would sky rocket. That’s not even counting all the people that have good thyroid labs, but may still be resistant on a cellular level. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Low SHBG. EOD vs daily shots. Is their a big difference?
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