Got it! I will try that. Thanks alot for all your input!No, that's not a clear case of high e2. Although low libido can be caused both by E2 being too high or too low. You didn't mention irritability which is another symptom of high e2. Like I said in my previous post. Drop the AI and drop your T dose and see how you do.
I'm just commenting after listening to a webinar on YouTube by Dr. Neil Rouzier. He doesn't try, he says, to control E2. A question was asked; If a patient isn't responding to a given dose of testosterone(and he prescribes compounded cream) what does he do? He said raise the dose. The follow up was asking if that doesn't work and he said he'd raise the dose, again, citing clinical abstracts that state that there is no upper limit for testosterone(That was my interpretation of what he stated). The pharmacokinetics of injectables and topical cream applied to the scrotum, being different, I don't know how one applies what he states to injectable testosterone.Also wondering, there are a lot of drs out there that say don’t worry about E2. Don’t even check it because it doesn’t matter. And never use an AI. Can anyone tell me what their approach would be then for someone that has a T level of 1000 but has no libido?