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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
one month on TRT + bloodwork before and after (prolactin raised)
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<blockquote data-quote="madman" data-source="post: 205966" data-attributes="member: 13851"><p>Blood work should be done at 6 weeks.....not 4!</p><p></p><p>Need to post reference ranges.</p><p></p><p>Your TT went from 358 --->791 ng/dL which would not only drive up your FT but also estradiol.</p><p></p><p>Your e2 is still under 22 pg/ml and unfortunately was not tested using the most accurate assay LC/MS-MS.</p><p></p><p></p><p><em><strong>1 week ago I have noticed that I had an <u>extremely high libido like in my early 20s</u> where I had to masturbate like 3x a day.</strong></em><strong><em> I am injecting 125mg Test-E weekly (every other day). But now suddenly my <u>libido decreased again</u>. Is this normal? I feel strong in the gym, but my libido is now again lower and I had sex yesterday with a woman and the orgasm was not as intense as 1 week ago, when I was super horny.</em></strong></p><p></p><p></p><p>I would not get too caught up on the insane libido as you need to understand how exogenous T works.</p><p></p><p>You are only 4 weeks in!</p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>post #2</strong></p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.excelmale.com/forum/threads/week-4-on-trt-lots-of-ups-downs.22732/#post-194832[/URL]</p><p></p><p></p><p><em>Keep in mind that when first starting trt not only are you injecting exogenous testosterone but your hpta although dysfunctional has not been shut down yet.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>After your first injection T levels will start rising and due to the esterified T used (enanthate/cypionate) hormone levels over the following weeks will be in FLUX until blood levels stabilize (4-6 weeks).</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>During this time it is common for many to experience what we call the <u>honeymoon period</u> where many tend to notice an increase in overall well-being and libido due to androgen levels rising/increased dopamine but unfortunately, this is short-lived and temporary as the body will eventually <u>adapt</u> once blood levels have <u>stabilized</u> (4-6 weeks) let alone the hpta will be shut down within the first (2-6 weeks) of starting trt.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>The first 6 weeks of therapy can be <u>very misleading</u> and many make the <u>critical mistake</u> <u>of gauging how they feel overall </u>regarding low-t symptoms because during the weeks leading up until blood levels stabilize your hormones are in <u>flux</u>.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>Even then once blood levels stabilize (4-6 weeks) it will take the body another <u>2-3</u> <u>months to adapt</u> to those new levels and this is the <u>critical time period</u> when one should <u>truly gauge</u> how they feel overall regarding <u>relief/improvement of low-t symptoms</u>.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em><strong><em>Many <u>get caught up with the euphoric like feeling and intense libido that they can experience when first starting trt or tweaking a trt protocol</u> (increasing T dose) but unfortunately this is <u>temporary and short-lived</u> as eventually, the body will adapt to those new levels and in most cases, as long as healthy TT/FT levels let alone other hormones are achieved on such protocol than one should experience the beneficial effects (mood/energy/libido/erections/recovery) but it will be more in the <u>norm</u> as opposed to the so-called <u>amazing</u>!</em></strong></em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>You are only 4 weeks in and most will wait 6 weeks then blood work will be done to see where such protocol (dose T/injection frequency) has you trough TT/FT/e2/DHT let alone blood markers such as RBCs/hemoglobin/hematocrit.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em><strong>The goal of trt is to replace physiological levels of testosterone through the use of exogenous testosterone in order to achieve a healthy TT/FT level which will result in the relief/improvement of low-t symptoms while at the same time minimizing/avoiding any potential side effects (cosmetic/overall health) while keeping blood markers healthy long-term.</strong></em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="madman, post: 205966, member: 13851"] Blood work should be done at 6 weeks.....not 4! Need to post reference ranges. Your TT went from 358 --->791 ng/dL which would not only drive up your FT but also estradiol. Your e2 is still under 22 pg/ml and unfortunately was not tested using the most accurate assay LC/MS-MS. [I][B]1 week ago I have noticed that I had an [U]extremely high libido like in my early 20s[/U] where I had to masturbate like 3x a day.[/B][/I][B][I] I am injecting 125mg Test-E weekly (every other day). But now suddenly my [U]libido decreased again[/U]. Is this normal? I feel strong in the gym, but my libido is now again lower and I had sex yesterday with a woman and the orgasm was not as intense as 1 week ago, when I was super horny.[/I][/B] I would not get too caught up on the insane libido as you need to understand how exogenous T works. You are only 4 weeks in! [B]post #2[/B] [URL unfurl="true"]https://www.excelmale.com/forum/threads/week-4-on-trt-lots-of-ups-downs.22732/#post-194832[/URL] [I]Keep in mind that when first starting trt not only are you injecting exogenous testosterone but your hpta although dysfunctional has not been shut down yet. After your first injection T levels will start rising and due to the esterified T used (enanthate/cypionate) hormone levels over the following weeks will be in FLUX until blood levels stabilize (4-6 weeks). During this time it is common for many to experience what we call the [U]honeymoon period[/U] where many tend to notice an increase in overall well-being and libido due to androgen levels rising/increased dopamine but unfortunately, this is short-lived and temporary as the body will eventually [U]adapt[/U] once blood levels have [U]stabilized[/U] (4-6 weeks) let alone the hpta will be shut down within the first (2-6 weeks) of starting trt. The first 6 weeks of therapy can be [U]very misleading[/U] and many make the [U]critical mistake[/U] [U]of gauging how they feel overall [/U]regarding low-t symptoms because during the weeks leading up until blood levels stabilize your hormones are in [U]flux[/U]. Even then once blood levels stabilize (4-6 weeks) it will take the body another [U]2-3[/U] [U]months to adapt[/U] to those new levels and this is the [U]critical time period[/U] when one should [U]truly gauge[/U] how they feel overall regarding [U]relief/improvement of low-t symptoms[/U]. [B][I]Many [U]get caught up with the euphoric like feeling and intense libido that they can experience when first starting trt or tweaking a trt protocol[/U] (increasing T dose) but unfortunately this is [U]temporary and short-lived[/U] as eventually, the body will adapt to those new levels and in most cases, as long as healthy TT/FT levels let alone other hormones are achieved on such protocol than one should experience the beneficial effects (mood/energy/libido/erections/recovery) but it will be more in the [U]norm[/U] as opposed to the so-called [U]amazing[/U]![/I][/B] You are only 4 weeks in and most will wait 6 weeks then blood work will be done to see where such protocol (dose T/injection frequency) has you trough TT/FT/e2/DHT let alone blood markers such as RBCs/hemoglobin/hematocrit. [B]The goal of trt is to replace physiological levels of testosterone through the use of exogenous testosterone in order to achieve a healthy TT/FT level which will result in the relief/improvement of low-t symptoms while at the same time minimizing/avoiding any potential side effects (cosmetic/overall health) while keeping blood markers healthy long-term.[/B][/I] [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
one month on TRT + bloodwork before and after (prolactin raised)
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