BJE
Active Member
If he has low ferritin he does not have iron overload. The indicator of iron overload is high ferritin.My hematocrit is 55% on Jatenzo, I'm one of the small percentage of men that get erythrocytosis on the newer oral testosterone. I have found that the higher hematocrit and hemoglobin aren't the cause of my ED, low libido and palpitations, it's the iron levels causing these symptoms.
Your iron is high, that's it! I recently discovered I had been using large doses of iron to treat hypotension, symptoms very similar to iron deficiency which I experienced more than once in my lifetime.
Whenever I'd lower my iron dosage, I unknowingly was experiencing hypotension that I mistook for iron deficiency. You see excess iron increases blood pressure, and for someone experiencing low blood pressure, the iron treats the hypotension and for years I always suspected I was using iron to treat an unknown medical condition and recently stopped my beta-blocker and hypotension cured.
So my ferritin and iron are on lower end of the ranges and my hematocrit and hemoglobin are unchanged, still elevated yet the symptoms (irritability, heart palpitations, libido/sexual dysfunction) are starting to go away.
High iron essentially means high transferrin, so your body because of very low iron previously is shuttling iron around as fast as it can to make up for lost time. This will keep the ferritin low while iron (transferrin) is rising.
You should check for iron overload or hemochromatosis and check for the C282Y genes. If you have it, you have your reason for needing TRT because hemochromatosis causes low-T.