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General Health & Fitness
Nutrition and Supplements
Zinc Supplements Can Lower Good (HDL) Cholesterol
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<blockquote data-quote="DxHypo" data-source="post: 18951" data-attributes="member: 6088"><p>Sorry, didn't mean to hijack this thread and make it about my case. I've read the concerns about excess zinc and the potential copper imbalance. Just looking for a way,not permanently, to lower E2 before having to resort to an AI, prescribed or not. I'm no longer seeing the urologist due to his dismissive attitude about alternative options. My primary care doctor is a great, personable doctor I've been seeing for over 25 years, but he isn't up-to-date with current trt protocols and when I've mentioned possibly needing an AI, he is not open to it. It was a major coup just getting him to allow me to self-inject test at home and I don't want to push too much with him. So it's either try high dose zinc or resort to "research chemicals". Zinc appears to be the lesser of the two evils at this point.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DxHypo, post: 18951, member: 6088"] Sorry, didn't mean to hijack this thread and make it about my case. I've read the concerns about excess zinc and the potential copper imbalance. Just looking for a way,not permanently, to lower E2 before having to resort to an AI, prescribed or not. I'm no longer seeing the urologist due to his dismissive attitude about alternative options. My primary care doctor is a great, personable doctor I've been seeing for over 25 years, but he isn't up-to-date with current trt protocols and when I've mentioned possibly needing an AI, he is not open to it. It was a major coup just getting him to allow me to self-inject test at home and I don't want to push too much with him. So it's either try high dose zinc or resort to "research chemicals". Zinc appears to be the lesser of the two evils at this point. [/QUOTE]
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General Health & Fitness
Nutrition and Supplements
Zinc Supplements Can Lower Good (HDL) Cholesterol
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