New to TRT. Received first labs. Concerned and need help.

There's this pervasive myth that 100 mg of testosterone cypionate per week is a low dose. It's not. Top-of-range natural production is equivalent to more like 90 mg TC per week. Typical production in healthy young men is equivalent to 50-70 mg TC per week. Thus you are taking more testosterone than almost any man could make naturally and yet perceive it to be low. There is no evidence that such supraphysiological dosing is better for overall health, and plenty to the contrary.
I agree with a lot of your post, but not sure why you continue to make this specific claim. I’ve provided TONS of evidence that 100-120/week provides a lot more benefits than 50-75/week with very minimal increase in risks(if any increase at all). You’ve provided ZERO evidence that 50-75 mg/week provides comparable benefits, or even that it is particularly safer.


- 100 mg/week is not an absurd starting dose, regardless of how many times you say it is


- if OP ran that protocol for a while and saw no benefits with regard to energy, motivation, or other mental aspects then the two most likely explanations (in order) are that the root cause wasn’t testosterone issues all along, which you alluded to …. Or 2.) he hasn’t given his body enough time to fully adjust, as the full spectrum of benefits can take 6-12 months or even longer to fully emerge. The likelihood that he never saw any benefits on those fronts because his starting dose was too high is low. Sure running excessive doses for extended periods of time can cause issues, but getting a huge bump in dopamine and other things while seeing no benefits on the mental front even during the honeymoon phase doesn’t point to an excessive dose imo. It most likely points to one of the other two things I mentioned earlier, or a combination of various other factors.


The only other thing I disagree with in your post, is that I would say people should be more careful tinkering with various neuromodulators like dopamine. You do a good job of pointing of the complexities when it comes to hormones, but I’d say the neuromodulators can be as tricky or even more so with regard to messing around with them and finding a good protocol.
 
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Symptoms prior to TRT: excessive fatigue, no energy, brain fog, difficulty concentrating, depression, anxiety, low libido, loss of muscle mass, reduced strength.
While there may be other causes, these symptoms are very common for older men (the mid-50 doldrums!). It sucks but its the unfortunate reality of getting older. If you find the solution, let me know.
 
Thank you for your feedback!

I will look up Will Cole and the tests you mentioned. That is a new area for me but I am willing to try most anything at this point.

I may be over training. I have worked out probably 5-6 days a week (unless I am sick) pretty consistently since I was a teenager. For me, working out gives me energy. Which is part of why it probably became a lifelong habit. Not every day is weight training. I do lots of cardio. More cardio than weights actually. I used to be a runner. Training for races, I often would get sick/worn down after my long runs. I would push myself too far. Probably my personality. I will try to lighten up my workouts and maybe take a day off midweek.

I haven't explored a thyroid correlation because my bloodwork never indicated an issue. Can labs all be within range and the thyroid still be a key piece to chronic fatigue/brain fog/etc? I will research, but if you have any advice on where to start or what meds may be beneficial, please let me know.

Again, thanks for everyone chiming in with their ideas. New ideas at least give me a little hope. After dealing with these symptoms this long, it often feels like I've tried everything.
I worked out 5-6 days/week for years(probably close to 10 years), but honestly now that I work out 3 days per week(push/pull/legs once per week) I have kept all my gains and possible even added a little. Exercise causes inflammation, often in a good manageable way that makes your body stronger… but pushing it too far can lead to excess inflammation and lots of the issues that go along with keeping the body chronically in that state. It could just be that all those years are catching up to you, your body is unable to sustain those levels at this point in your life, or a combination of both of those. As I stated above an easy way to test the impact of that aspect of your life is to take two weeks off from the gym. And as an adamant lifter I fully understand it can be dreadful to think of missing workouts for that long, but at this point in my life I’ve learned that recovery weeks are important… especially if you want to go hard while you are exercising.

As far as elimination diets, the AIP (automimmune protocol or anti inflammatory protocol) diet has been the best diet I’ve ever found. It’s very restrictive for the first month, but when I stuck to it strictly it was probably the most positive impact a diet has ever had on me. Mental clarity and energy levels were through the roof. If you plan to do it though, I hope you like sweet potatoes because you’re about to eat a shit ton of them lol. And you’re supposed to slowly re-introduce foods so you can clearly identify any that cause issues for you, which I didn’t follow those phases all that good and ended up drifting back towards less healthy diets… though I’d say my diet overall is better than the vast majority of the population. And I do think people can benefit from it even if they just do it for a month at a time then go back, just because of how much inflammation and stress it removes from the body during that time. So yeah, if you think you can stick to it for a month then definitely go with that one.
 
I agree with a lot of your post, but not sure why you continue to make this specific claim. I’ve provided TONS of evidence that 100-120/week provides a lot more benefits than 50-75/week with very minimal increase in risks(if any increase at all). You’ve provided ZERO evidence that 50-75 mg/week provides comparable benefits, or even that it is particularly safer.

If you recall, I dismantled every one of your purported references. Not one refuted my claims. You basically relied on one study in which no subjects experienced physiological levels of testosterone throughout each injection cycle.

Meanwhile, you continue to defend the indefensible: that a starting dose for replacement of a hormone should be well over what most men would make naturally. Of course this is absurd. And all the while the parade of posters suffering from this stupidity somehow escapes your notice.
 
Thank you for your feedback!

I will look up Will Cole and the tests you mentioned. That is a new area for me but I am willing to try most anything at this point.

I may be over training. I have worked out probably 5-6 days a week (unless I am sick) pretty consistently since I was a teenager. For me, working out gives me energy. Which is part of why it probably became a lifelong habit. Not every day is weight training. I do lots of cardio. More cardio than weights actually. I used to be a runner. Training for races, I often would get sick/worn down after my long runs. I would push myself too far. Probably my personality. I will try to lighten up my workouts and maybe take a day off midweek.

I haven't explored a thyroid correlation because my bloodwork never indicated an issue. Can labs all be within range and the thyroid still be a key piece to chronic fatigue/brain fog/etc? I will research, but if you have any advice on where to start or what meds may be beneficial, please let me know.

Again, thanks for everyone chiming in with their ideas. New ideas at least give me a little hope. After dealing with these symptoms this long, it often feels like I've tried everything.
Some comments in no particular order.

- Your Vitamin D reminds me that there are apparently some infections that use the Vitamin D receptor as an entryway into cells, and for those infections Vitamin D can make actually make things worse. Dr. Michael Ruscio (who you should also look into) did a whole podcast on that years ago. I'm a big beleiver in Vitamin D levels above 50, but you might stops the supps for a couple of weeks and see if you notice anything better. That would be a clue that you have a related infection although that is by no means definitive.
- It is well-known that endurance exercise that goes beyond an hour or so IIRC weakens the Innate immune system for a few days. I think one of the main researchers on that topic is from NC State.
- While I am not an endurance athlete, I follow some people who are and many of them stress that most people tend to train at too high of a level. The Maffetone Method is focused on that topic, or as Mark Sisson says, make your short hard workouts shorter and harder, and your long easy workout longer and easier. I think Brad Kearns wrote a book about his issues going into the runner's version of overtraining which somewhat overlap with your issues.
- The types of Doc's I mentioned should be very familiar with thyroid issues, but it is another topic with a lot of nuance and unreliable testing that doesn't correlate with symptoms. I've forgotten what the "right " thyroid tests are, but it's not TSH, and at some point experimentation may be in order if nothing else has worked.
- Testosterone is kind of a "sledgehammer" brute-force treatment which is often appropriate, but there are a lot of other issues that can require a lot more digging.
- As Chris Masterjohn has pointed out, there are enough conditions that are considered "rare" that having a rare condition is actually not all that rare.
 
If you recall, I dismantled every one of your purported references. Not one refuted my claims. You basically relied on one study in which no subjects experienced physiological levels of testosterone throughout each injection cycle.

Meanwhile, you continue to defend the indefensible: that a starting dose for replacement of a hormone should be well over what most men would make naturally. Of course this is absurd. And all the while the parade of posters suffering from this stupidity somehow escapes your notice.
Lmao… no you didn’t. Not trying to hijack this thread as well, but OP can find the discussion here:



It wasn’t just “one study”.. I shared numerous studies which all showed that 100-120 mg/week resulted in better results in for patients and did not meaningfully increase their risk of side effects. And I could’ve shared more, but you seemed unable to comprehend the results from the multiple I shared so I stopped. You also continued to deflect and insist they don’t count because 50 mg once per week isn’t a physiological dose, as if splitting the dose in half would result in all of the benefits suddenly emerging in all those people. In reality, it was just a way for you reject the data because it went against your view…. only problem is that data and reality doesn’t care about any of our views. It just is what it is and it’s up to us to interpret it and learn from it. Meanwhile you shared exactly ZERO studies which showed that people on 50-75 mg/week can achieve the same benefits, or even that those doses are meaningfully safer than 100-120 mg/week. So no… you didn’t “dismantle” anything. Unless you consider sharing a rodent study that put the subjects’ levels at over 500% their normal state as evidence that supraphysiological doses can be bad a “dismantling” of my argument lol.


For your 2nd point, I also shared lots of examples of compounds that people take well above levels that their body produces naturally.

Pregnenolone

DHEA

Testosterone

Estradiol

HCG

Hormone-related birth control

Thyroxine

Insulin

Progesterone

Melatonin

Creatine

Vitamin D



You keep saying “of course it’s absurd” but have provided no reason other than “of course it is”. Are the millions of people taking creatine every day being absurd? When I take vitamin D in the winter to improve well-being am I being absurd? Can you give a reason for why it’s absurd other than “because it’s more than the body makes”?
 
Lmao… no you didn’t. Not trying to hijack this thread as well, but OP can find the discussion here:...

How quickly they forget. After this point-by-point examination of your references you didn't even attempt a response.

... You also continued to deflect and insist they don’t count because 50 mg once per week isn’t a physiological dose, as if splitting the dose in half would result in all of the benefits suddenly emerging in all those people. ...

All this study shows is that being hypogonadal is somewhat worse than being mildly hypergonadal, something I never disputed. There's no comparison to an eugonadal group, which I assert would overall do better than the high and low groups, with the presence of side effects in the outliers being a strong supporting argument.

...
For your 2nd point, I also shared lots of examples of compounds that people take well above levels that their body produces naturally.

You have yet to provide any scientific justification for beginning TRT with above-physiological dosing. This applies to most of the items on your list as well. Hormonal birth control has much research behind it demonstrating the tradeoffs involved in non-physiological dosing. It's also another disingenuous comparison, because here you are trying to interfere with a natural biological process rather than restore normal function after deficiency. Your way of thinking would likely kill someone if applied to insulin.

You seem to think that normal ranges for hormones are irrelevant and that there are no consequences for exceeding them with supraphysiological dosing. This is completely at odds with modern medicine and demonstrates the reality-distortion field around testosterone.
 
If you recall, I dismantled every one of your purported references. Not one refuted my claims. You basically relied on one study in which no subjects experienced physiological levels of testosterone throughout each injection cycle.

Meanwhile, you continue to defend the indefensible: that a starting dose for replacement of a hormone should be well over what most men would make naturally. Of course this is absurd. And all the while the parade of posters suffering from this stupidity somehow escapes your notice.
You can't expect everyone to get anxiety from testosterone. I believe it's a lot smaller than you think.

"Remember" the top two things we can do for longevity is vo2 Max and weight training.

 
You can't expect everyone to get anxiety from testosterone. I believe it's a lot smaller than you think.
...

I'm not sure what you're referring to. I don't recall even expressing an opinion on the prevalence of this side effect. I did tell you that TRT had the opposite effect on me, with higher doses being somewhat sedating and demotivating.

The side effects of excessive testosterone that I've discussed include raised HCT, sleep impairment, poor lipids, reduced libido, minor thyroid dysfunction, and degraded sexual function including penile insensitivity, ED, PE, and DE.
 
I'm not sure what you're referring to. I don't recall even expressing an opinion on the prevalence of this side effect. I did tell you that TRT had the opposite effect on me, with higher doses being somewhat sedating and demotivating.

The side effects of excessive testosterone that I've discussed include raised HCT, sleep impairment, poor lipids, reduced libido, minor thyroid dysfunction, and degraded sexual function including penile insensitivity, ED, PE, and DE.
Yes, exactly. Higher doses did not work for you. And there are others who get anxiety from TRT. Most thrive on higher levels. Work on your VO2 max and your weight training. The benefits are great.
 
.... Most thrive on higher levels. ...

In real life men thrive on physiological levels of testosterone. Think the current president @ 441 ng/dL. On TRT some men get away with higher levels, while others suffer side effects and come here, as you well know.

Work on your VO2 max and your weight training. The benefits are great.

What would I do without your incredible wisdom? Maybe I should eat right and brush my teeth too.
 
In real life men thrive on physiological levels of testosterone. Think the current president @ 441 ng/dL. On TRT some men get away with higher levels, while others suffer side effects and come here, as you well know.



What would I do without your incredible wisdom? Maybe I should eat right and brush my teeth too.
Haha well, thank you for your response. I definitely agree. We all need to work on our VO2 max and lift weights. We wouldn't have to play around with our T levels so much and inject crazy protocols.

I hope your workouts are good.
 
All this study shows is that being hypogonadal is somewhat worse than being mildly hypergonadal, something I never disputed. There's no comparison to an eugonadal group, which I assert would overall do better than the high and low groups, with the presence of side effects in the outliers being a strong supporting argument.
Now I’m honestly questioning if you even looked at the studies(as in plural…as in multiple…as in more than one) that clearly showed the people that took 100-120 had much better and more benefits than those taking 50-75. You are either making stuff up, or are seriously not capable of comprehending the things I’m showing. Which I could’ve shown more, but I never did due to your inability to honestly look at them. And again, you have provided ZERO… as in NONE…as in ABSOLUTELY NO studies that show people taking 50-75 mg per week get the same benefits as people taking 100-120. All you did was talk about the dangers of taking super-physiological doses… then shared a rodent study which pushed the subjects’ levels to more than 500% their natural levels.
You have yet to provide any scientific justification for beginning TRT with above-physiological dosing.
No scientific evidence other than the numerous studies which showed people taking 100-120 mg per week benefited a lot more than people taking 50-75 while being at minimal risk of negative side effects. Again, why do you keep lying and saying I haven’t shared them. At this point I'm honestly wondering why…


This applies to most of the items on your list as well. Hormonal birth control has much research behind it demonstrating the tradeoffs involved in non-physiological dosing. It's also another disingenuous comparison, because here you are trying to interfere with a natural biological process rather than restore normal function after deficiency. Your way of thinking would likely kill someone if applied to insulin.
Now go through all the other examples. Also, plenty of people take insulin at superphysiological doses. I would never suggest they take extremely high levels of insulin, so just lmao at you resorting to “your logic would kill people”. Meanwhile, just like with testosterone, your logic WOULD result in diabetics not getting treated with adequate doses if you’re saying it would be absurd for them to take doses higher than what a healthy adult would make.

You seem to think that normal ranges for hormones are irrelevant and that there are no consequences for exceeding them with supraphysiological dosing. This is completely at odds with modern medicine and demonstrates the reality-distortion field around testosterone.
So you have no other reason other than “it’s just absurd”. I figured as much, just wanted to give you the opportunity to present an argument if you had one.

I also think your strawman attacks are very telling for your case(or more accurately, lack thereof). I never said ranges are completely irrelevant and I didn’t say there are never consequences for exceeding them. What I’ve said repeatedly, and supported both with multiple studies as well as pointing out flaws in your logic… is that doses of 100-120 seem to be a good dose for getting close to the top of the U curve with regard to seeing lots of benefits without introducing significant risks. At least when I misrepresent your arguments I acknowledge that it’s a fair callout on your part and correct as needed. You just double down on it. Which again, I think it says a lot about your case when you are forced to invent fake narratives to argue against.
 
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Now I’m honestly questioning if you even looked at the studies(as in plural…as in multiple…as in more than one) that clearly showed the people that took 100-120 had much better and more benefits than those taking 50-75. You are either making stuff up, or are seriously not capable of comprehending the things I’m showing. Which I could’ve shown more, but I never did due to your inability to honestly look at them. And again, you have provided ZERO… as in NONE…as in ABSOLUTELY NO studies that show people taking 50-75 mg per week get the same benefits as people taking 100-120. All you did was talk about the dangers of taking super-physiological doses… then shared a rodent study which pushed the subjects’ levels to more than 500% their natural levels.

The burden of proof clearly is on you with the extraordinary claim that non-physiological levels are better for overall health and should be the default starting point for TRT. As I went through your list of references it became clear that you had not read them and were relying on a faulty AI summary. You're grasping at straws with that one study that did not include physiological levels. I agree that with once-weekly injections of testosterone cypionate you will get better results with 100 mg than 50 mg. But 100 mg is simply the lesser evil. In fact there is a ton of evidence in favor of physiological dosing of testosterone. Ask your AI to tell you more about injections of testosterone undecanoate. You were linking to some of these same studies without realizing that the comparable dose of cypionate is 75 mg/week.

No scientific evidence other than the numerous studies which showed people taking 100-120 mg per week..

Give me a break. All of those papers were based on that one non-physiological dose-response study. The other links were not even relevant and you should be embarrassed for including them.

Now go through all the other examples. Also, plenty of people take insulin at superphysiological doses.

For one thing, they certainly do not start at these doses. It also does not apply to Type 1 diabetics. "However, because injected insulin is delivered subcutaneously (bypassing the liver's first-pass metabolism, where ~80% of natural insulin is cleared), it can lead to higher peripheral (systemic) insulin levels than what occurs naturally, even if the total dose is not excessive." Only in Type 2 diabetes with insulin resistance might you need to go higher.

Now the number of hypogonadal men with effective "testosterone resistance" is likely minute, so your analogy crashes and burns.

I also think your strawman attacks are very telling for your case(or more accurately, lack thereof). I never said ranges are completely irrelevant and I didn’t say there are never consequences for exceeding them. What I’ve said repeatedly, and supported both with multiple studies as well as pointing out flaws in your logic… is that doses of 100-120 seem to be a good dose for getting close to the top of the U curve with regard to seeing lots of benefits without introducing significant risks. At least when I misrepresent your arguments I acknowledge that it’s a fair callout on your part and correct as needed. You just double down on it. Which again, I think it says a lot about your case when you are forced to invent fake narratives to argue against.

You're inventing this "top of the U curve" thing. Show me the publications and this time include specific quotes. It's no straw man argument that you are willing to disregard physiological ranges. Taking 100+ mg TC/week puts virtually every man over the physiological range. You are claiming unproven benefits—aside from muscle growth—while downplaying the very real risks that are illustrated regularly by posters here. You also do not know whether the long-term risks of excessive androgen exposure are "significant" or not. Yet you glibly suggest that everyone should be exposed to them.

You know something about making straw man arguments. The one point I have been very rigid on is that there should be a low-and-slow approach to TRT. What exactly is your argument against this? In the end it would amount to catering to a small minority who may need higher-end levels at the expense of the vast majority who do fine with physiological levels.
 
Haha well, thank you for your response. I definitely agree. We all need to work on our VO2 max and lift weights. We wouldn't have to play around with our T levels so much and inject crazy protocols.

I hope your workouts are good.

It's refreshing to see some marginally clever pushback interspersed with the usual inanities. Unfortunately it falls short, because fitness is good.
 
The burden of proof clearly is on you with the extraordinary claim that non-physiological levels are better for overall health and should be the default starting point for TRT. As I went through your list of references it became clear that you had not read them and were relying on a faulty AI summary. You're grasping at straws with that one study that did not include physiological levels. I agree that with once-weekly injections of testosterone cypionate you will get better results with 100 mg than 50 mg. But 100 mg is simply the lesser evil. In fact there is a ton of evidence in favor of physiological dosing of testosterone. Ask your AI to tell you more about injections of testosterone undecanoate. You were linking to some of these same studies without realizing that the comparable dose of cypionate is 75 mg/week.
Ok, well then we could’ve saved a lot of time by having you present this ton of evidence that shows dosing at physiological levels is better than higher doses. Surely you will now present all this evidence. If that’s your claim, then the burden of proof is also on you to support your claim, or does it only work one way??





Older men are as responsive as young men to testosterone's anabolic effects; however, older men have lower testosterone clearance rates, higher increments in hemoglobin, and a higher frequency of adverse effects. Although substantial gains in muscle mass and strength can be realized in older men with supraphysiological testosterone doses, these high doses are associated with a high frequency of adverse effects. The best trade-off was achieved with a testosterone dose (125 mg) that was associated with high normal testosterone levels, low frequency of adverse events, and significant gains in fat-free mass and muscle strength.




Dose-dependent changes in AT(adipose tissue) mass were negatively correlated with TE dose at all sites and were equally distributed between the trunk and appendices. The lowest dose was associated with gains in sc, intermuscular, and intraabdominal AT, with the greatest percent increase occurring in the sc stores. At the three highest TE doses(which includes 125 mg per week) , thigh intermuscular AT volume was significantly reduced, with a greater percent loss in intermuscular than sc depots, whereas intraabdominal AT stores remained unchanged. In conclusion, changes in testosterone concentrations in young men are associated with dose-dependent and region-specific changes in AT and lean body mass in the appendices and trunk.









Give me a break. All of those papers were based on that one non-physiological dose-response study. The other links were not even relevant and you should be embarrassed for including them.



For one thing, they certainly do not start at these doses. It also does not apply to Type 1 diabetics. "However, because injected insulin is delivered subcutaneously (bypassing the liver's first-pass metabolism, where ~80% of natural insulin is cleared), it can lead to higher peripheral (systemic) insulin levels than what occurs naturally, even if the total dose is not excessive." Only in Type 2 diabetes with insulin resistance might you need to go higher.

Now the number of hypogonadal men with effective "testosterone resistance" is likely minute, so your analogy crashes and burns.
Again, now do all the others. Or better yet let’s just start here since you keep avoiding it: Are the millions of people that take creatine every day being absurd? It’s a simple yes or no question. If you can be honest enough to answer that perhaps we’ll move on to the other hormones.


You're inventing this "top of the U curve" thing. Show me the publications and this time include specific quotes. It's no straw man argument that you are willing to disregard physiological ranges. Taking 100+ mg TC/week puts virtually every man over the physiological range. You are claiming unproven benefits—aside from muscle growth—while downplaying the very real risks that are illustrated regularly by posters here. You also do not know whether the long-term risks of excessive androgen exposure are "significant" or not. Yet you glibly suggest that everyone should be exposed to them.
Again, it isn’t “unproven benefits”… I’ve shared other studies with regard to well-being and mood along with other benefits. Sure some people may have risks from higher levels of testosterone, some have risks from taking it at all. Some people have risks from peanuts. People have risks from all types of things. We don’t base medical approaches on outliers. We base it on data and evidence for what is a good starting point to give someone the best odds of maximizing benefits while minimizing risks. Perhaps your issue is with the minimizing risks part… but there are also studies(that I’ve shared) which show people taking lower doses can actually end up worse off. I’m not saying some people don’t need lower doses. However, you conveniently ignore all of the people doing great at doses of 100-120(of which there are many more than people taking 50). You’re fixated on this aspect because of your personal experience and because you are over-exposed to specific examples that may support your case(though in some cases it’s also quite possible that they don’t and you just perceive it that way due to your bias). The studies and real-world approach by the vast majority of trt doctors show people at 100-120 do better than people at 50-75. That doesn’t mean all, but it means it’s a reasonable starting point.

You know something about making straw man arguments. The one point I have been very rigid on is that there should be a low-and-slow approach to TRT. What exactly is your argument against this? In the end it would amount to catering to a small minority who may need higher-end levels at the expense of the vast majority who do fine with physiological levels.
.
2 things… well actually 2.5 things here


1.) you’re just using the tried and true persuasion technique of over-stating the benefit of what you’re supporting and also over-stating the risk of what you’re opposing. You fail to mention the risk of starting at 50 mg/week and ending up worse than when you started(which has been shown in a study). You can claim that it doesn’t apply because levels were artificially dropped before starting the study, but actually the lack of endogenous testosterone would be a very real factor for people taking 50 mg/week. So there are risks to starting at 50 mg/week. Not the least of which is the patient stopping treatment before getting the benefits that could be provided at higher doses. It’s also extremely likely that they would not receive the full extent of benefits at that dose. This is supported by the studies I’ve shared(which for some reason you continue to lie about). And I even shared one in this very post that shows 125 per week is a great sweet spot for maximizing benefits while not introducing significant risks.

2.) you’re just making stuff up and claiming it’s a tiny percentage of guys who need levels above 80 mg/week, and that the vast majority do fine with 80 mg per week or lower. Those claims are not supported by any studies I’ve seen or the real-world data or the countless anecdotal reports of people who need more than 80 mg week to get the most benefits. Unless you are saying “fine” as in “yeah you aren’t maximizing the benefits but at least you don’t feel like shit anymore”. If that’s the case then fine, just say it that way. But don’t lie and say there isn’t tons of evidence that additional benefits come along with higher doses(as in 100-120) without a substantial increase in risks. People making that calculation aren’t being “absurd” as you like to claim.

2.5) you’re being hypocritical by just making stuff up and not providing any evidence for your claims while demanding that the burden of proof is on others any time they make a statement.



Which reminds me… weren’t you supposed to be sharing a “ton of proof” that shows doses of 50-75 mg provides as many or more benefits at 100-120 while being a lot safer??
 
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The study in question found evidence supporting an inverted U-shaped association between testosterone levels and bone mineral density in elderly men.
However, it's important to note that this is a single study and further research is likely needed to solidify these findings and determine causality.
 

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This tool provides predictions based on statistical models and should NOT replace professional medical advice. Always consult with your healthcare provider before making any changes to your TRT protocol.

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Understanding Your Hormones

Estradiol (E2)

A form of estrogen produced from testosterone. Important for bone health, mood, and libido. Too high can cause side effects; too low can affect well-being.

DHT

Dihydrotestosterone is a potent androgen derived from testosterone. Affects hair growth, prostate health, and masculinization effects.

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The biologically active form of testosterone not bound to proteins. Directly available for cellular uptake and biological effects.

Scientific Reference

Lakshman KM, Kaplan B, Travison TG, Basaria S, Knapp PE, Singh AB, LaValley MP, Mazer NA, Bhasin S. The effects of injected testosterone dose and age on the conversion of testosterone to estradiol and dihydrotestosterone in young and older men. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2010 Aug;95(8):3955-64.

DOI: 10.1210/jc.2010-0102 | PMID: 20534765 | PMCID: PMC2913038

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