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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Switching from sustanon to enanthate
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<blockquote data-quote="madman" data-source="post: 197446" data-attributes="member: 13851"><p><strong>So for example if on the mark of week 8 I feel bad, or feel unstable day to due to injection frequency lets say, or my blood levels are lower than Im used to and I feel some symptoms back, should I wait more or do a correction of protocol?</strong></p><p></p><p>Again the first 6 weeks means nothing when looking at the bigger picture.</p><p></p><p>Hormones are in flux during the weeks leading up until blood levels stabilize (4-6 weeks TC/TE).</p><p></p><p>The body is trying to <u>adjust</u> during the transition.</p><p></p><p>Once blood levels have stabilized the following 2-3 months is the most critical time period as it will take time for the body to <u>adapt</u> to the new levels and this is when one should gauge how they truly feel overall regarding relief/improvement of low-t symptoms and overall well-being.</p><p></p><p>If after 6 weeks whether starting trt or tweaking a protocol (dose T/injection frequency) you feel horrible and labs show that TT/FT levels are sub-par then it would make sense to increase the T-dose slightly as it would be pointless to run sub-par T levels for the next few months.</p><p></p><p>The first 6 weeks are misleading and many make the critical mistake of tweaking a protocol way too soon (dose T/injection frequency).</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><u></u></p><p><u></u></p><p><u></u></p><p><u></u></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="madman, post: 197446, member: 13851"] [B]So for example if on the mark of week 8 I feel bad, or feel unstable day to due to injection frequency lets say, or my blood levels are lower than Im used to and I feel some symptoms back, should I wait more or do a correction of protocol?[/B] Again the first 6 weeks means nothing when looking at the bigger picture. Hormones are in flux during the weeks leading up until blood levels stabilize (4-6 weeks TC/TE). The body is trying to [U]adjust[/U] during the transition. Once blood levels have stabilized the following 2-3 months is the most critical time period as it will take time for the body to [U]adapt[/U] to the new levels and this is when one should gauge how they truly feel overall regarding relief/improvement of low-t symptoms and overall well-being. If after 6 weeks whether starting trt or tweaking a protocol (dose T/injection frequency) you feel horrible and labs show that TT/FT levels are sub-par then it would make sense to increase the T-dose slightly as it would be pointless to run sub-par T levels for the next few months. The first 6 weeks are misleading and many make the critical mistake of tweaking a protocol way too soon (dose T/injection frequency). [U] [/U] [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Switching from sustanon to enanthate
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