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Thyroid, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, DHEA, etc
Thyroid, DHEA, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, etc
Raising Pregnenolone, Progesterone and DHEA with HCG
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<blockquote data-quote="Gman86" data-source="post: 278385" data-attributes="member: 15043"><p>I like the way ur at least brainstorming about it. Ur theory about T being high might not be totally wrong. When I started TRT my test levels were actually pretty damn good. Usually 600-700. At age 27. It was my free T that was also very low in the reference range, or slightly below the bottom of the reference range, due to mY SHBG being around 55, at that time. I tried for a year to get it down and get my free T up, and resolve my symptoms, but nothing worked. So I ended up going on hcg mono for a couple years, and then TRT after that. </p><p></p><p>So I wonder if a downstream hormone, like DHEA, is high, if it’s requiring a lot of say preg, to be that high, and uses up a lot of preg, thus leaving it to be on the low side when getting it checked. Kind of like how when guys go on exogenous test, they can see their ferritin decrease, I assume due to increasing RBC production, which requires more iron, or something along those lines. So maybe my dhea being so high is causing my preg to show up very very low on blood tests? </p><p></p><p>And then my prog is high, so my preg demands must be through the roof lol. But then does it mean that I have more preg than any other person known to man since both my prog and dhea levels are always above the top of the reference range? Lol. So like, so I have low or high preg levels? It’s so confusing lol</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Gman86, post: 278385, member: 15043"] I like the way ur at least brainstorming about it. Ur theory about T being high might not be totally wrong. When I started TRT my test levels were actually pretty damn good. Usually 600-700. At age 27. It was my free T that was also very low in the reference range, or slightly below the bottom of the reference range, due to mY SHBG being around 55, at that time. I tried for a year to get it down and get my free T up, and resolve my symptoms, but nothing worked. So I ended up going on hcg mono for a couple years, and then TRT after that. So I wonder if a downstream hormone, like DHEA, is high, if it’s requiring a lot of say preg, to be that high, and uses up a lot of preg, thus leaving it to be on the low side when getting it checked. Kind of like how when guys go on exogenous test, they can see their ferritin decrease, I assume due to increasing RBC production, which requires more iron, or something along those lines. So maybe my dhea being so high is causing my preg to show up very very low on blood tests? And then my prog is high, so my preg demands must be through the roof lol. But then does it mean that I have more preg than any other person known to man since both my prog and dhea levels are always above the top of the reference range? Lol. So like, so I have low or high preg levels? It’s so confusing lol [/QUOTE]
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Thyroid, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, DHEA, etc
Thyroid, DHEA, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, etc
Raising Pregnenolone, Progesterone and DHEA with HCG
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