Charliebizz
Well-Known Member
it lowers my cortisol very fast. I start feeling low cortisol symptoms with in the first few weeks. I feel like it has to do more with neurotransmitters then the hormone side. Nt seem to react much faster then hormones for me. I did try Hcg mono. And with trt also. I do not feel well at all with hcg in the mix.I tried pregneonolone a while back but it gave me varicose veins. Had zero before, then following preg supplementation had a bunch pop up which also coincided with vein pain. A few studies on pubmed claimed that progesterone can cause varicose veins, so I always assumed it was excess preg -> prog and steered away from supplementing prog as a result. Given prog is the direct precursor to cortisol I'm interested to see where my cortisol levels are.
Did you use hcg on T? Your low cortisol could be from the absence of LH from HPTA suppression resulting in inadequate cholesterol -> preg conversion, with all downstream hormones suffering as a result. Preg is extremely important for neurotransmitter production too, so that might also explain why the SSRI boosted your levels. Just a thought, I could be completely off the mark.
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I completely agree with everything you said. I have a lot of ideas / theories bouncing around my head at the moment, and while the exact specifics of each differ, they all lead back to one central issue: chronic stress of some form.
Our testosterone levels are low. Testosterone, and all anabolic systems within the body (especially thyroid function), rapidly decline during times of stress as the body directs energy towards internal systems essential to life - i.e organ function. It makes no sense to have anabolic hormones like test, dht, thyroid and prog elevated when catabolic hormones like cortisol and adrenaline are elevated during stress, as essentially they have opposite roles within the body. As a result, the anabolic systems are suppressed until the stress is elevated.
This is fine within normal physiology when all systems are in working order. However, problems arise when the body is in a constant state of stress, be it mental or cellular, and the anabolic systems are constantly suppressed. Not only do catabolic hormones directly suppress the production of anabolic hormones, they also suppress their ability to exert their action. T3 is one of the main determinants of the metabolic rate and requires glucose as substrate for effective oxidative metabolism. Both adrenaline and cortisol increase lipolysis and liberate free fatty acids into the blood for metabolism to provide energy during times of stress. FFA metabolism directly inhibits glucose metabolism meaning blood glucose levels remain elevated (eventually leading to insulin resistance), and even when glucose does enter the cell, its mainly metabolised using the glycolytic pathway which is extremely energy inefficient and leads to excessive lactic acid production.
I see evidence of the above in myself everyday. I used to have zero trouble exercising, but now even brisk walks lead to the painful 'runners side stitch' from lactic acid buildup; intense exercise isn't possible at all anymore. My constant fatigue also stems from this inefficient energy generation. This also explains why I have all of the symptoms of hypothyroidsm despite normal bloods - adequate thyroid hormone is in the blood, it just can't exert its action. Every part of my body is deteriorating: my teeth are quickly decaying, my hair and eyebrows are rapidly thinning, my skin always cracking / dry, I'm always fatigued and my mental health is in tatters. This is all because my body is chronically stressed and driving all of its resources towards addressing said stress. My face has aged 10 years in the past two (wrinkles, dark undereye circles, development of the shiny calcified bald scalp of old men) and I truly believe it's due to metabolic and cellular decline. Things like hair, vibrant skin and teeth aren't essential to life, so during times of stress their energetic demands aren't prioritised. Constant stress = constant sympathetic response = constant stress hormone elevation = constant metabolic suppression = all of our issues.
Its all good and well knowing the above, but without being able to identify what the underlying chronic stressor actually is, there's no way to address it. This is where modern medicine has failed us. If you go to the gp and explain all of the above, they'll look at you like you're crazy and try and prescribe a SSRI / beta blocker because they think you're an anxious hypochondriac. Yes doctor, I am extremely anxious, but that's because my body is failing in front of my very eyes but you tell me I'm normal, and that its all in my head because the blood test's fall withthin range... I'm considering going into medicine once I've completed my current physiology undergrad. People shouldn't have to be theorising on online forum like this just to feel normal, and things aren't going to change anytime soon.
This is also why TRT fails us. Whilst flooding the system with exogenous hormones can mitigate some of the damage done by the chronic elevation of stress, it does nothing to actually address the stressor, and can oftentimes exacerbate the issue if said exogenous hormone also effects the function of the thyroid and adrenal glands which are already impaired - i.e elevated estradiol from trt can directly inhibit thyroid function further worsening the situation. My TSH always increased in response to my e2 / prolactin on TRT.
I've found the field of hormone replacement therapy as a whole severely lacks the required level of complexity to actually fix these issues, and that often leaves a lot to be desired. X hormone is low? Let's just replace it without any real investigation as to why its low outside of "are you morbidly obese?". Oh look, now y hormone is low due to taking x hormone, let take something for that too. Before you know it every system in the body is dysregulated and you end up where I am now.
I have no idea where to even start when trying to find the underlying issue, as essentially everything is interlinked so you have no clue what is causing what. My iron levels are high, my prog is low, my thyroid function is extremely poor, my test levels are on the low end, my white blood cell count is low - but which one of those, if any, is actually the cause of the rest? Who knows, and the scary thing is I don't envisage myself finding out anytime soon.
That got unintentionally long and depressing haha, but it's just a brief overview of how I'm looking at this whole situation at the minute. I left out all of the specifics and pathways I'm considering, but if I find anything concrete I'll post the whole thing at some point.
your situation is crazy. You went on trt didn’t feel much. Then went off and felt better for a bit and now are on a rapid decline. I personally have never got worse then I was before trt. My only issue that is worse is widespread muscle and joint pain. Can’t pin point what causes it as it is Intermittent. But it did start when I first meat my hormones up by under eating and overtraining. Best thing I did to feel better was quitting lifting. I still play hockey and do cardio but lifting weights crushes my cortisol. Or at least my symptoms of low cortisol come back hard. On trt I can tolerate the work outs a tiny bit more but not enough where I can go regularly like I used too. It sucks cause I love lifting and it’s the only way I can lose weight easy.