Posted about this last week and "Vince" the forum police gave incorrect information and then locked the thread. Pretty irresponsible thing to do when people's health is at stake, but cognitive dissonance is a bitch huh?
Saw an endocrinologist to get the facts. Problem is, we're all used to testing testosterone and estrogen levels at the same time. It was explained very logically to me that what I already suspected was true: When you're treating a "low" condition, testosterone for example, you should test at the low point, which is what we all do. On the flip side, when you're treating a "high" condition, for example prescribing anastrozole to combat HIGH estradiol, then you must test at the high point. Makes perfect sense since your concern is monitoring the high point.
Sadly the only accurate way to do this is to test estradiol levels separate from testosterone. I had my last blood draw for testosterone on my normal low day, then had separate blood drawn for estradiol on a day when we reasoned e2 would be highest.
Yes we should continue to have estradiol tested at the same time we test testosterone levels. It's always good to have a general sense of e2 levels. But if you're super sensitive to e2 and anastrozole like I am, you really need to do it separately if you want to be accurate.
Saw an endocrinologist to get the facts. Problem is, we're all used to testing testosterone and estrogen levels at the same time. It was explained very logically to me that what I already suspected was true: When you're treating a "low" condition, testosterone for example, you should test at the low point, which is what we all do. On the flip side, when you're treating a "high" condition, for example prescribing anastrozole to combat HIGH estradiol, then you must test at the high point. Makes perfect sense since your concern is monitoring the high point.
Sadly the only accurate way to do this is to test estradiol levels separate from testosterone. I had my last blood draw for testosterone on my normal low day, then had separate blood drawn for estradiol on a day when we reasoned e2 would be highest.
Yes we should continue to have estradiol tested at the same time we test testosterone levels. It's always good to have a general sense of e2 levels. But if you're super sensitive to e2 and anastrozole like I am, you really need to do it separately if you want to be accurate.