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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Side Effect Management
Success stories for managing TRT induced increase in hematocrit?
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<blockquote data-quote="Cataceous" data-source="post: 192867" data-attributes="member: 38109"><p>I can't comment on the troches because I don't know their pharmacokinetics.</p><p></p><p>Clomid or any method of raising testosterone can often be dosed to avoid problems with hematocrit. I would suggest enclomiphene rather than Clomid. Empower Pharmacy ships to all 50 states, so if you can get a prescription then it's a viable option.</p><p></p><p>Alternatively, you can adjust your current protocol to possibly reduce hematocrit. Rough estimates put your peak testosterone at 1,100 ng/dL or more and your average level at 800 ng/dL. If I'm understanding you, you have cut your dose from 0.66 mL (132 mg?) T cypionate down to 0.33 mL (66 mg?). I would cut back a little to 0.08 mL (16 mg?) injected every other day. This should result in fairly stable serum T levels around what's typical for young men, 600-800 ng/dL. If this doesn't reduce hematocrit sufficiently then a final injection-based option is to experiment with daily doses of mixed esters.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cataceous, post: 192867, member: 38109"] I can't comment on the troches because I don't know their pharmacokinetics. Clomid or any method of raising testosterone can often be dosed to avoid problems with hematocrit. I would suggest enclomiphene rather than Clomid. Empower Pharmacy ships to all 50 states, so if you can get a prescription then it's a viable option. Alternatively, you can adjust your current protocol to possibly reduce hematocrit. Rough estimates put your peak testosterone at 1,100 ng/dL or more and your average level at 800 ng/dL. If I'm understanding you, you have cut your dose from 0.66 mL (132 mg?) T cypionate down to 0.33 mL (66 mg?). I would cut back a little to 0.08 mL (16 mg?) injected every other day. This should result in fairly stable serum T levels around what's typical for young men, 600-800 ng/dL. If this doesn't reduce hematocrit sufficiently then a final injection-based option is to experiment with daily doses of mixed esters. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Side Effect Management
Success stories for managing TRT induced increase in hematocrit?
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