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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Side Effect Management
Should We Be Managing Estradiol and Hematocrit in Men on Testosterone Replacement?
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<blockquote data-quote="J. Keith Nichols MD" data-source="post: 71079" data-attributes="member: 15691"><p>Thanks so much. The only reason I joined your website is that you are one of the few that seems to get the big picture. We all should continue to learn and grow and be willing wo change our way of thinking if the medical evidence supports a change in what we have been previously taught. Once we learn something one way it is just human nature to resist any change . It's the world is flat mentality. I am glad you understand the importance of estradiol in men (and women) and that is why I am here. Your last video with the urologist was unfortunately not good in promoting maintaining estradiol levels in men. Not from you but from the urologist. He mistakenly extrapolated the adverse effects with Premarin and provera to estradiol. No RCT to date has shown harm with E2. The problem is that physicians and others use the word estrogen loosely without ever distinguishing between "which" estrogen. They are not the same but they get used interchangeably which is wrong. Premarin is Conjugated equine estrogen (only 15% estradiol) and estradiol is 100%17beta estradiol. The same issue occurs with polycythemia Vera and erythrocytosis. They are not the same but erythrocytosis gets propagated as being the same as PV. I will put the evidence together to support what I am saying and post it on the forum. Google the H/H of a Sherpa. Are they being told to donate blood or dying of blood clots while climbing Mt. Everest? Look at the Tour de France athletes that abused T and epogen. Not one died of a heart attack, stroke, or DVT. The reason is that increasing ones H/H is not polycythemia Vera.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J. Keith Nichols MD, post: 71079, member: 15691"] Thanks so much. The only reason I joined your website is that you are one of the few that seems to get the big picture. We all should continue to learn and grow and be willing wo change our way of thinking if the medical evidence supports a change in what we have been previously taught. Once we learn something one way it is just human nature to resist any change . It's the world is flat mentality. I am glad you understand the importance of estradiol in men (and women) and that is why I am here. Your last video with the urologist was unfortunately not good in promoting maintaining estradiol levels in men. Not from you but from the urologist. He mistakenly extrapolated the adverse effects with Premarin and provera to estradiol. No RCT to date has shown harm with E2. The problem is that physicians and others use the word estrogen loosely without ever distinguishing between "which" estrogen. They are not the same but they get used interchangeably which is wrong. Premarin is Conjugated equine estrogen (only 15% estradiol) and estradiol is 100%17beta estradiol. The same issue occurs with polycythemia Vera and erythrocytosis. They are not the same but erythrocytosis gets propagated as being the same as PV. I will put the evidence together to support what I am saying and post it on the forum. Google the H/H of a Sherpa. Are they being told to donate blood or dying of blood clots while climbing Mt. Everest? Look at the Tour de France athletes that abused T and epogen. Not one died of a heart attack, stroke, or DVT. The reason is that increasing ones H/H is not polycythemia Vera. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Side Effect Management
Should We Be Managing Estradiol and Hematocrit in Men on Testosterone Replacement?
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