Newbie- first blood results - 6 weeks

Craig06

New Member
40yo, with a long history of sub 300ng/dl TT values. I finally hopped on trt 6 weeks ago and just got back first set of bloods.

It’s prescribed by my primary care doc. He’s old school and he started me on test cyp given as an 1ml injection of 200mg/ml every 2 weeks. So dose is 100mg/week.

I have been taking 0.5ml once weekly instead because I’m worried about the high peaks from only injecting twice a month.

Pre-TRT values:

TT: 222 Ng/dl
FT: 69: pg/ml
SHBG: 11 (yes I am 30-40 lbs overweight)
Estradiol (ultrasenstitive) - 18

6 weeks on TRT values (trough values-
bloods taken at exactly 7days post injection and before next injection):

TT: 450 Ng/dl
FT: 125 pg/ml
Estradiol (standard test) - 30

From a symptomatic standpoint, I’m fairly happy but not in a honeymoon phase: energy levels, libido and sleep have all been better.

But blood pressure has gone up, appetite has skyrocketed (not great when I’d love to lose weight), and I have been getting random headaches (maybe blood pressure related, maybe shifting hormone related )

  • How do these new numbers look?
  • Is my trough TT/FT reasonable and can you determine peak from these?
  • Also is E2 gonna be much higher than 30 at my peak and if so, is this a problem?

Finally all my CBC values were good for now but hemocrit went up from about 41% pre-TRT to 43% on these bloods. Will this stabilize, and what’s a value where it starts getting concerning ?

Thanks for any thoughts !
 
40yo, with a long history of sub 300ng/dl TT values. I finally hopped on trt 6 weeks ago and just got back first set of bloods.

It’s prescribed by my primary care doc. He’s old school and he started me on test cyp given as an 1ml injection of 200mg/ml every 2 weeks. So dose is 100mg/week.

I have been taking 0.5ml once weekly instead because I’m worried about the high peaks from only injecting twice a month.

Pre-TRT values:

TT: 222 Ng/dl
FT: 69: pg/ml
SHBG: 11 (yes I am 30-40 lbs overweight)
Estradiol (ultrasenstitive) - 18

6 weeks on TRT values (trough values-
bloods taken at exactly 7days post injection and before next injection):

TT: 450 Ng/dl
FT: 125 pg/ml
Estradiol (standard test) - 30

From a symptomatic standpoint, I’m fairly happy but not in a honeymoon phase: energy levels, libido and sleep have all been better.

But blood pressure has gone up, appetite has skyrocketed (not great when I’d love to lose weight), and I have been getting random headaches (maybe blood pressure related, maybe shifting hormone related )

  • How do these new numbers look?
  • Is my trough TT/FT reasonable and can you determine peak from these?
  • Also is E2 gonna be much higher than 30 at my peak and if so, is this a problem?

Finally all my CBC values were good for now but hemocrit went up from about 41% pre-TRT to 43% on these bloods. Will this stabilize, and what’s a value where it starts getting concerning ?

Thanks for any thoughts !

6 weeks on TRT values (trough values-
bloods taken at exactly 7days post injection and before next injection):

TT: 450 Ng/dl
FT: 125 pg/ml
Estradiol (standard test) - 30




Welcome to Nelsons house!

Smart move ditching that old outdated 200 mg T every 2 weeks protocol.

When it comes to T-therapy that outdated protocol 200 mg TC/TE every 2 weeks still being pushed by those clueless doctor's is far from optimal as it would have one being back to hypogonadal before their next injection due to the PKs.

Sure some men may still fare well on such but it is far from optimal not only due to the rollercoaster effect where T levels are sky-high off the hop only to be followed by much lower levels come day 10-14 which can easily have a negative impact on ones mood, energy, libido and erectile function let alone you will not be getting/taking advantage of the full anabolic benefits of T (increase muscle, strength, enhanced recovery).

Always best to post testing method/referencesranges for labs.

Keep in mind although TT is important to know FT is what truly matters as it is the active unbound fraction of T responsible for the positive effects.

Not sure what testing method was used for free testosterone (direct IA, ED, UF or calculated).

When it comes to testing the most critical fraction free testosterone you would need to have it tested using the most accurate assay the gold standard Equilibrium Dialysis especially in cases of altered SHBG to know where it truly sits.

Otherwise you would need to use/rely on the next best the calculated linear law-of-mass action Vermeulen (cFTV) which will give a good approximation mind you it tends to slightly overestimate.

No on should be using/relying on the known to be inaccurate direct IA.

Looking over you labs results which luckily were done at true trough (lowest point) before your next injection you are hitting a not so stellar trough TT 450 ng/dL and descent trough FT 12.5 ng/dL 7 days post-injection which means your peak TT/FT and estradiol will be much higher as in double.

Although your trough TT/FT may seem far from stellar and easily has room to come up if need be keep in mind this is 7 days post-injection.

You would be far better off splitting your weekly dose and injecting 50 mg twice-weekly (every 3.5 days) which will bring up your trough and clip your peak before even considering increasing your weekly dose.

Blood levels will also be more stable throughout the week vs once weekly.

Hammering this home as usual.

FT <5 ng/dL would be considerd low.

FT 5-9 ng/dL would be considered the grey zone where some men may experience symptoms of low-T.

FT 10-15 ng/dL would be healthy.

FT 20-25 ng/dL would be high-end/high.

The majority of men will do well with a trough FT 15-25 ng/dL depending on the injection frequency.

Need to keep in mind that there is a big difference between one running a high-end/high trough FT 20-25 ng/dL injecting daily vs twice-weekly vs once weekly.

Also going to be a big difference in peak--->trough on said protocol.

Always need to be mindful trough/injection frequency.

Many tend to overlook this and gun for a high-end/high trough FT only to end up struggling with sides especilly in the long run.

Just to put this in perspective most healthy young males would be hitting a cFTV 13-15 ng/dL or 10-12 ng/dL tested using the most accurate assay the gold standard Equilibrium Dialysis and this is a short-lived daily peak to boot.

Even if you take those natty outliers in the 95th percentile hitting a high FT 25 ng/dL again this is a short-lived daily peak to boot.




Finally all my CBC values were good for now but hemocrit went up from about 41% pre-TRT to 43% on these bloods. Will this stabilize, and what’s a value where it starts getting concerning ?
Your baseline hematocrit was already bottom end so driving it up will be beneficial.



Keep in mind when one is starting therapy or tweaking a protocol (increasing dose of T)) the hematocrit will start to increase within the 1st month and the biggest increase will be seen at the 3-6 month mark.

For many men hematocrit will reach a plateau at 6 months but some men will continue to see increases until 9 to 12 months before levels fully stabilize.

You are only 6 weeks in and your hematocrit went from 41-43% so it will continue to increase further over the following months but even then you have lots of room before it would ever be considered too high as it will still end up within the physiological range and below 50%.

The cut-off for hematocrit is 54%.

As I stated in another thread If one has no underlying health issues and is not experiencing any negative sides most in the know specializing in testosterone therapy would not fret if the patient's hematocrit falls within 50-54%.

Yes some will be more cautious and take measures once hematocrit hits 52%.

Most of the endos and clueless GPs are sticklers and hesitate once your hematocrit gets over the top end and prefer to keep patients levels no higher than 50%.

Consider yourself one of the lucky ones as your baseline level was already at the bottom-end.




 
Typed a lengthy reply and got an error, argh!
Anyway, thank you for the great response and valuable info and likewise, thank you to Nelson too!
I've been reading a lot of the excellent content he has linked and learning a lot.
The main takeaway I have from your reply is that you believe I should be injecting 2x per week. Is this correct?
This is something that I was strongly considering doing from the start but I HATE injecting myself and have a needle phobia, so I was hoping 1x per week would suffice. :(
Regardless, 2x per week should help to: minimize TT/FT/E2 peaks, while maximizing TT/FT trough and minimizing hemocrit rise, correct?
Is there any reason to continue my current protocol as is/will anything change further or more info to be gained? Or would you recommend switching asap if I would like to optimize E2 peak and FT trough?
6 weeks on TRT values (trough values-
bloods taken at exactly 7days post injection and before next injection):

TT: 450 Ng/dl
FT: 125 pg/ml
Estradiol (standard test) - 30




Welcome to Nelsons house!

Smart move ditching that old outdated 200 mg T every 2 weeks protocol.

When it comes to T-therapy that outdated protocol 200 mg TC/TE every 2 weeks still being pushed by those clueless doctor's is far from optimal as it would have one being back to hypogonadal before their next injection due to the PKs.

Sure some men may still fare well on such but it is far from optimal not only due to the rollercoaster effect where T levels are sky-high off the hop only to be followed by much lower levels come day 10-14 which can easily have a negative impact on ones mood, energy, libido and erectile function let alone you will not be getting/taking advantage of the full anabolic benefits of T (increase muscle, strength, enhanced recovery).

Always best to post testing method/referencesranges for labs.

Keep in mind although TT is important to know FT is what truly matters as it is the active unbound fraction of T responsible for the positive effects.

Not sure what testing method was used for free testosterone (direct IA, ED, UF or calculated).

When it comes to testing the most critical fraction free testosterone you would need to have it tested using the most accurate assay the gold standard Equilibrium Dialysis especially in cases of altered SHBG to know where it truly sits.

Otherwise you would need to use/rely on the next best the calculated linear law-of-mass action Vermeulen (cFTV) which will give a good approximation mind you it tends to slightly overestimate.

No on should be using/relying on the known to be inaccurate direct IA.

Looking over you labs results which luckily were done at true trough (lowest point) before your next injection you are hitting a not so stellar trough TT 450 ng/dL and descent trough FT 12.5 ng/dL 7 days post-injection which means your peak TT/FT and estradiol will be much higher as in double.

Although your trough TT/FT may seem far from stellar and easily has room to come up if need be keep in mind this is 7 days post-injection.

You would be far better off splitting your weekly dose and injecting 50 mg twice-weekly (every 3.5 days) which will bring up your trough and clip your peak before even considering increasing your weekly dose.

Blood levels will also be more stable throughout the week vs once weekly.

Hammering this home as usual.

FT <5 ng/dL would be considerd low.

FT 5-9 ng/dL would be considered the grey zone where some men may experience symptoms of low-T.

FT 10-15 ng/dL would be healthy.

FT 20-25 ng/dL would be high-end/high.

The majority of men will do well with a trough FT 15-25 ng/dL depending on the injection frequency.

Need to keep in mind that there is a big difference between one running a high-end/high trough FT 20-25 ng/dL injecting daily vs twice-weekly vs once weekly.

Also going to be a big difference in peak--->trough on said protocol.

Always need to be mindful trough/injection frequency.

Many tend to overlook this and gun for a high-end/high trough FT only to end up struggling with sides especilly in the long run.

Just to put this in perspective most healthy young males would be hitting a cFTV 13-15 ng/dL or 10-12 ng/dL tested using the most accurate assay the gold standard Equilibrium Dialysis and this is a short-lived daily peak to boot.

Even if you take those natty outliers in the 95th percentile hitting a high FT 25 ng/dL again this is a short-lived daily peak to boot.




Finally all my CBC values were good for now but hemocrit went up from about 41% pre-TRT to 43% on these bloods. Will this stabilize, and what’s a value where it starts getting concerning ?
Your baseline hematocrit was already bottom end so driving it up will be beneficial.



Keep in mind when one is starting therapy or tweaking a protocol (increasing dose of T)) the hematocrit will start to increase within the 1st month and the biggest increase will be seen at the 3-6 month mark.

For many men hematocrit will reach a plateau at 6 months but some men will continue to see increases until 9 to 12 months before levels fully stabilize.

You are only 6 weeks in and your hematocrit went from 41-43% so it will continue to increase further over the following months but even then you have lots of room before it would ever be considered too high as it will still end up within the physiological range and below 50%.

The cut-off for hematocrit is 54%.

As I stated in another thread If one has no underlying health issues and is not experiencing any negative sides most in the know specializing in testosterone therapy would not fret if the patient's hematocrit falls within 50-54%.

Yes some will be more cautious and take measures once hematocrit hits 52%.

Most of the endos and clueless GPs are sticklers and hesitate once your hematocrit gets over the top end and prefer to keep patients levels no higher than 50%.

Consider yourself one of the lucky ones as your baseline level was already at the bottom-end.
 
Typed a lengthy reply and got an error, argh!
Anyway, thank you for the great response and valuable info and likewise, thank you to Nelson too!
I've been reading a lot of the excellent content he has linked and learning a lot.
The main takeaway I have from your reply is that you believe I should be injecting 2x per week. Is this correct?
This is something that I was strongly considering doing from the start but I HATE injecting myself and have a needle phobia, so I was hoping 1x per week would suffice. :(
Regardless, 2x per week should help to: minimize TT/FT/E2 peaks, while maximizing TT/FT trough and minimizing hemocrit rise, correct?
Is there any reason to continue my current protocol as is/will anything change further or more info to be gained? Or would you recommend switching asap if I would like to optimize E2 peak and FT trough?

You are only 6 weeks in which is far too early to jump the gun here.

The first 6 weeks means nothing when looking at the bigger picture here.

Even though your blood levels have stabilized it will still take a few more months for your body to adapt to its new set-point and this is the critical time period when you need to gauge how you truly feel overall regarding relief/improvement of low-T symptoms and overall well-being.

Yes you easily have room to bring up your trough FT but if you feel descent so far you can just stick it out a few more months as you may do well were you are at.

Before even considering a dose increase the smarter move would be splitting your weekly dose and injecting 50 mg T twice-weekly which would bring clip your peak bring up your trough and rest in more style blood levels throughout the week.

Yes the main advantage when it comes to splitting your weekly dose and injecting twice-weekly is clipping the peak--->trough and blood levels will be more stable throughout the week.

Yes it can help minimize the increase in hematocrit but keep in mind it is not just the peaks or peak--->trough as running to high a trough/steady-state FT whether one is injecting once weekly, twice-weekly, M/W/F, EOD or daily will still have a big impact on driving up the hematocrit.

Even then in your case I would not be too concerned here as. your baseline is bottom-end which is not healthy and you will benefit from increasing your hematocrit.

As I stated previously when starting therapy or tweaking a protocol (increasing dose of T) the hematocrit will start to increase within the 1st month and the biggest increase will be seen at the 3-6 month mark.

For many men hematocrit will reach a plateau at 6 months but some men will continue to see increases until 9 to 12 months before levels fully stabilize.

Not sure what needles you are using (gauge/needle length) but most men on T-therapy whether injecting shallow IM or strictly sub-q are using LDS insulin syringes.

Virtually painless!

An LDS (low dead-space) insulin syringe comes with a fixed/attached needle 27-31G various needle lengths.

Most in the know on TTh are using an LDS insulin syringe whether 1 ml (100 unit), .5 mL (50 unit) or .3mL (30 unit) with fixed needle length (6MM, 8MM, 12.7MM) when injecting strictly sub-q or 12.7MM when injecting shallow IM.

One of the main advantages of using an LDS insulin syringe for testosterone therapy is that there will be minimal waste of medication due to low-dead space let alone you can draw/inject using the same needle (fixed).

Numerous benefits of using an LDS insulin syringe (fixed needle) as injections are virtually pain-free, minimal trauma to the tissue, minimizing any waste of medication, easier for many to measure accurate doses when injecting lower volumes, and you can draw/inject using the same needle to boot.


“Fixed insulin type syringes have no void space at the point where the needle joins the syringe, and so are known as Low Dead Space Syringes, which is sometimes abbreviated in the literature to LDSS. They are made like this so that the full accurate dose is delivered, and there is no waste


 

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