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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
Nebido(undecaonate) daily sub q Ed
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<blockquote data-quote="Cataceous" data-source="post: 186663" data-attributes="member: 38109"><p>The long half-life of testosterone undecanoate means that injecting more frequently than once a week probably has very little effect on serum testosterone, which is going to be pretty constant after stabilization on a fixed protocol.</p><p></p><p>Did you have the same problems before starting TRT, or did some things improve while others got worse?</p><p></p><p>You may be starting to suspect that adjusting your testosterone is not the answer. However, in these circumstances I might try an extended period with serum testosterone at a level that is closer to where it would be naturally at one's prime—and when everything is working right. Because we don't usually have this information we might use the averages for healthy young men. A typical Tru-T calculated free testosterone level is 24 ng/dL. With an SHBG of 25 nMol/L and default albumin this puts total testosterone at around 700 ng/dL. A fair test may require half a year: three months to make the transition and another three months for evaluation.</p><p></p><p>Have you tried hCG? For some men, adding this to TRT is a large enhancement. Have you measured prolactin? Progesterone? Thyroid hormones? DHT? It looks as though you've already experimented with AI use. Beyond these there are other things to try, but they are more experimental, without even a lot of anecdotal evidence to back them up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cataceous, post: 186663, member: 38109"] The long half-life of testosterone undecanoate means that injecting more frequently than once a week probably has very little effect on serum testosterone, which is going to be pretty constant after stabilization on a fixed protocol. Did you have the same problems before starting TRT, or did some things improve while others got worse? You may be starting to suspect that adjusting your testosterone is not the answer. However, in these circumstances I might try an extended period with serum testosterone at a level that is closer to where it would be naturally at one's prime—and when everything is working right. Because we don't usually have this information we might use the averages for healthy young men. A typical Tru-T calculated free testosterone level is 24 ng/dL. With an SHBG of 25 nMol/L and default albumin this puts total testosterone at around 700 ng/dL. A fair test may require half a year: three months to make the transition and another three months for evaluation. Have you tried hCG? For some men, adding this to TRT is a large enhancement. Have you measured prolactin? Progesterone? Thyroid hormones? DHT? It looks as though you've already experimented with AI use. Beyond these there are other things to try, but they are more experimental, without even a lot of anecdotal evidence to back them up. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Blood Test Discussion
Nebido(undecaonate) daily sub q Ed
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