Realize that most endocrinologist are the most conservative people on the planet when it comes to prescribing anything – they are perfectly happy to have a young healthy male in his 20s with the testosterone level of someone who is 85 years old because it’s in the “normal” range. This point is valid about not jumping into soon – but I would be more concerned about this if I was in my 30s – I started TRT when I was almost 50 – so at that point it was only going to go to more downhill from there – and I didn’t have to worry about having children and coming off. There is also more evidence to show that high normal testosterone levels is more protective for males and actually reduces all forms of mortality. My Endo was a real jerk – I went to him for second opinion, after starting from another doctor, and when he told me that I’m going to risk having cardiac problems the longer I’m on, I showed him an article from the Journal of cardiology that show the complete opposite and he got upset and threw me out of his office. My point is they are very old-school in their approach – which is good in some ways – but you need to be your own advocate – I think you’re going down the right path – try to seek out the other problems first – but just realize that most roads are going to lead to TRT and it’s not like fixing your thyroid or fixing your vitamin levels is going to drastically bump your Testosterone levelsHi guys
I'm almost at the point where my endo, after long discussions, is at least open to trying TRT.
He gave a long talk though that he has a lot of patients in his practice that were prescribed TRT by doctors who were not really looking into other causes, and now they are stuck with a "life-long commitment", they regret it now (or don't want to commit to life-long treatment) and he is busy trying to restore their f*cked up hormonal axis.
So my question is:
Any of you guys who has started TRT - and regretted it afterwards, for whatever reasons?
Thx