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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
What should I tell my primary care doctor about testing my thyroid? He only did TSH/reflex free T4.
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<blockquote data-quote="ratbag" data-source="post: 90281" data-attributes="member: 972"><p>He's not ignorant he only doing what he was trained to do. Mainstream medicine from an administrative standpoint is very careful in what tests are ordered. Their is no wasted testing. It's become so bad that they don't really run enough tests to fully determine what's wrong. These MD's are trained to do just the TSH and only if that is out of range then they start a protocol with just synthroid to bring that TSH number down. Specialists like our sponsor Defy know that doesn't work. In fact most specialists know that a TSH of 2 or over usually indicates an underlying problem such as low T3. But this is something mainstream medicine ignores.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ratbag, post: 90281, member: 972"] He's not ignorant he only doing what he was trained to do. Mainstream medicine from an administrative standpoint is very careful in what tests are ordered. Their is no wasted testing. It's become so bad that they don't really run enough tests to fully determine what's wrong. These MD's are trained to do just the TSH and only if that is out of range then they start a protocol with just synthroid to bring that TSH number down. Specialists like our sponsor Defy know that doesn't work. In fact most specialists know that a TSH of 2 or over usually indicates an underlying problem such as low T3. But this is something mainstream medicine ignores. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
What should I tell my primary care doctor about testing my thyroid? He only did TSH/reflex free T4.
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