61 year old wanting to start TRT

BigFella

New member
(Actually, not quite accurate - I have been using AndroForte, a scrotally applied transdermal cream for four months, but now I want to get serious.)

I have been lurking and learning for a while.

I'm 61 and I'm androgen deficient, and have discovered just how hard it is to get taken seriously.

A bit of backgound:

I have been physically active all my life. I rowed at an elite level when I was young, played squash in A grade (when it went down to H grade) in my 20s, did an Ironman triathlon on 15 months of training when I was 45, and I gym with a Personal Trainer three times a week and have done for years.

I'm 6'5", and when I was rowing I was 200lbs - that was 40 years ago, but that's an indication of my ideal body composition. When I was triathloning I was about the same, at probably about 12% body fat. Now I'm about 270lbs and I'm guessing at 30%BF.

I'm on my second marriage, and it's an excellent one! I work with my wife, and having done that for eleven years I think she's crazy enough to put up with me no matter what. We have three kids, I have an earlier two. Each of them is a high achiever - one winning the Aussie equivalent of a Pulitzer prize, one winning a university medal in law (a bit like a Rhodes scholarship), one representing our country in Asia playing soccer and singing solo in Notre Dame (the one in Paris!) and in Westminster Abbey.

By the evidence I guess I also am a high achiever, though it never seems like that to me. I have been my own boss for 20 years of my life. We have our own company selling software worldwide. We are now rated as a medium sized business (which means we miss out on the small business perks - damn).

So I do know how to put the effort in, and it is frustrating me like crazy that I can't achieve anything at the moment.

I have plenty of my own demons. After forty years I've finally given up smoking - for good, I think. I drink every day, averaging about six drinks a day. Why? Stress, relief from pressure. If I was Muslim I'd be praying half the day to deal with the pressure. In my thirties I was prescribed benzodiazipines for stress. I got hooked - up to ten tabs per day - and came off cold turkey. The medical profession had no idea. That was two years of hell and another five years of slow recovery. Benzos are the worst drug of all, period. But hey, it was prescribed by a doctor, so all good!

I have never taken any illegal drugs - period. (Ok, ok, maybe six or eight joints forty years ago, if you must know!) I have never injected anything. So, by definition, I have never done any cycles.

However I am taking a number of prescribed medications:

  • Ramipril for high blood pressure
  • A diuretic for fluid retention caused by Ramipril
  • Sleeping pills to get me off to sleep
  • Prozac for depression
  • Codeine-based painkillers for headaches

Whenever I do something I research it like crazy - then I do it.

I have done the ageing male test and it indicates that I'm testosterone deficient. So I go to my GP (general practitioner, i.e. doctor) and tell him that:

  • I'm depressed
  • I have too much abdominal fat
  • I am losing muscle tone
  • Am far less aerobically fit than I could expect to be
  • I have aching joints
  • I have libido so low that I don't care it is low
  • I get night sweats
  • I am always tired
  • I can't sleep well
  • I am forgetful and moody
  • I have lack of focus
  • If I have to speak I can't think of the right words to say, so I can't do my job

. . . and so on. In other words I have every Q&A symptom for testosterone deficiency. He laughs and says that I'm getting old - get over it. So I ask for a full blood test and I get it.

EVERY marker is pretty much in the middle of the range, except for testosterone (at the bottom) and cholesterol (just inside the top acceptable limit), uric acid (just over acceptable).

So I keep researching. It turns out that the testosterone level I recorded 303 ng/dL (In Aussie terms 10.3 nmol/L, 8.0-38.0) which is the testosterone level of the average 95 year old male.

Two months later I get another test: T down to 288 ng/dL, 9.8 nmol/L.

So I finally find a doctor that doesn't laugh, and I see him, though his clinic is 2,000 miles away. He prescribes AndroForte 2%, a transdermal cream, applied scrotally. And my life starts changing - briefly. I was writing a diary at the time and an entry in early January referred to "clarity of thought and speed of decision making that I haven't experienced for years". But that lasted only a short time.

I got another test on 3 January: Total Test was down to 250 (8.8), Oestradiol was at 117. In terms of how I was feeling I had almost dropped back to where I had been - aside from my scrotum looking like a pre-pubescent boy's and my breasts looking like a pre-pubescent girl's there wasn't much change. So he prescribed a tiny dose of an Aromatase inhibitor (AI) and raised my T from 2% to 5% - I said that I didn't figure I could get enough AndroForte into me without rubbing the stuff in for 24 hours per day, which would definitely give people the wrong idea. (There was one improvement - no night sweats since starting on transdermal T).

Another test on 5 April: Testosterone down to 153 (5.2).

So I'm still researching, and I'm finding that scrotally applied transdermal T is very easily aromatised. That could explain the elevated estrogen (or at least the sensitive nipples).

It is also highly inconsistent as a delivery method - it spikes and drops like crazy - and I figure that could be the reason that my natural T production has shut down - or appears to have.

But it still doesn't explain WHY my T dropped in the first place. But I've found something that is a long shot but might be it - I gave up smoking.

I believe there is a feedback loop in play: once T levels start dropping that leads to lots of things which lead to lower T. But there is also something else - smokers have higher T levels than non-smokers. (Yes, I didn't believe it either, but it's in a paper which I can dig up if needed.)

So here I am, working hard and getting stressed, and I give up smoking, which leads to lower T, which leads to . . . sheer hell.

There is no option for me. I have a company to run. If I had had me working for me in the last six months I would have fired me.

Anyway, here's the plan:

In Australia the medical profession is as incompetent as anywhere else in the world, but at least we can choose our doctor, unlike some of our friends in Canada. I'm in the east, and I found a doctor in Perth, so I saw him once and had a phone consultation once. (Phone consultations aren't covered by our medical cover - but it's still a hell of a lot better system than most other places in the world!).

Now, however, I need to work with a doctor - not work against a doctor. And it looks like I have a lot of work to do in teaching one about androgen deficiency and Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT). (I had one appointment with an endo who was only interested in diagnosing me with acromegaly - a disease which causes feet and jaws to grow, for God's sake, caused by hypersecretion of growth hormone after maturity (I have a prominent jaw, as did my dad and as do my kids). He spent half the appointment trying to convince himself that I had it. I told him I was on AndroForte cream (an Aussie product, which a bloody specialist should know about), he said if I wanted him to treat me I'd have so "stop injecting that stuff" and I pointed out that AndroForte was a transdermal, for God's sake. ("That's why I said "Cream")". Yes, I had to pay for the consultation. What a dickhead. I emailed another endo and she made it quite clear that she didn't know anything about androgen replacement and didn't want to know. At least she didn't waste two hours of my day and charge me $250 for the pleasure.)

In Australia unless you get two tests below 250 you aren't able to get Testosterone. One down, one to go. The times I had blood drawn and the T was above 250 were times when I was feeling good - you don't need an appointment to get blood drawn here, so if I was feeling like crap I'd go straight to work. Next time I get blood drawn I will be feeling like crap.)

So I'll get my second sub-250 T results back and I'll be good to go.

And this is where I came in. I have been lurking for ages, and I am fans of many of you, but I have to give Cashout a special mention. Thanks heaps mate. I love your combination of commonsense and intelligence. It's so rare they go together!

I'm planning a very, very simple regime: 50mg Testosterone Cypionate twice weekly, IM or Sub-Q. From what I have read I don't believe I'll need Human Chorionic Gonadotropin (HCG) - the reason my balls are shrinking is because I am hitting them with transdermal scrotal cream and the levels areflucutuating wildly. 50mg Test Cyp twice a week should get my T levels to about 600. That's where I would like to start.

I don't want to be a bodybuilder. I just want my life back. Maybe then I'll start on the path to look just a little like Cashout . . .

So that's the quesion:

For someone like me is 50MG Test Cyp twice a week, and nothing else, a good idea?

Yes, I know it's diet and exercise too - after fifty years of exercise I do know that!
 
Last edited:
balls shrunk cause your introducing exogenous testosterone to your body. body sees it has enough and shuts down. its gonna stay that way when you on injectables.

You plan sounds good. im doing 50mg every 3 days to try and get more stable levels. i was doing 100 every 5 days but the spikes would cause acne.
 
Thanks Misc

Not too worried about tight scrotum, though it is more comfortable if they are swinging in the breeze. I am curious as to whether anyone else has experienced more scrotal tightness with a scrotal transdermal than with other transdermals. From what I have read it isn't just something obvious; there may be some science to it.

Anyway what I'm looking for by injecting is mid-range T levels that don't fluctuate much, and it really seems impossible on AndroForte.
 
Hi Mate - I would try and get off the codeine and alcohol , its hell on the test levels . Same with the Prozac , once your test levels are higher you might find you don"t need it ...~Bo
 
balls shrunk cause your introducing exogenous testosterone to your body. body sees it has enough and shuts down. its gonna stay that way when you on injectables.

You plan sounds good. im doing 50mg every 3 days to try and get more stable levels. i was doing 100 every 5 days but the spikes would cause acne.
+1

Welcome to the boards BigFella.

To be honest I had to look up benzodiazepines, we know it as Valium and Xanax. Good job getting off of them.

I don't think that anybody on here is using transdermal scrotal cream.

Can you get an MRI done? Do you have any idea why your T is low?

Make sure to get a blood test with PSA, and make sure to get a DRE. If you have any cancer the T will make the cells multiply much faster.

Trying 50mg 2x week to start is a good starting plan. If you want your nads back a little Human Chorionic Gonadotropin (HCG) regularly would do wonders.

Very interesting about the smoking and T, I would love to hear more about that.

And you get the prize for most miles traveled finding a Dr. 2,000. Damn!!!
 
Thanks guys. One thing I like about this board is the tone: "Try to get off the codeine and alcohol" rather than "get off it, you bloody idiot". I guess it's because if you're on this forum you've been there and know it isn't so easy sometimes.

That's the plan - get off everything negative. The main reason I put the personal history in there was to show that I'm familiar with high performance, and I'm struggling at the moment. It's not a matter of turning myself into someone I'm not - it's a matter of getting back to where I was.

The codein-based painkillers have been with me for 45 years. I get headaches and I have been through everything to prevent them and failed, now I just treat the symptom as I can't find the cause. (I didn't graduate from uni because I had a headache for six months.)

Alcohol: I love it as a social lubricant, and usually it causes no problem, but I'm dependent on it at the moment. Why? Because life is so bloody hard.

One thing which I didn't mention in my original post: Depression was a severe problem for me last year and the transdermal T has dramatically lessened that. I am going in the right direction.

But I repeat: The goal is to do it ALL right. No anti-depressants, no sleeping pills, no alcohol, nothing other than good stuff. But to get there when life is so bad with low T - that's very, very difficult, so I'm pinning my hopes on getting there this way.
 
I started researching smoking and testosterone in response to Frustrated1's comment. (By the way, F1: You are another whose posts I read closely. Thanks heaps.)

Summary: I gave up on the research - there is simply too much data, and it would take this way off-topic. Suffice to say that every piece of data indicates a correlation between smoking and higher T levels. (And on the other hand, every bit of "common sense" indicates the opposite.)

It doesn't interest me that much as I think I've kicked the habit this time, but there is certainly a strong probablility that giving up smoking unmasked latent hypogonadism.

What concerns me a little is that the inverse may apply - that high T levels mean that one is more likely to smoke, and I don't want to be tempted again, so I'm going to have to watch it when I raise my levels to something more like those of a human male.

If anyone is interested just Google "smoking and testosterone levels".

Frustrated1:

"Can you get an MRI done? Do you have any idea why your T is low?

Make sure to get a blood test with PSA, and make sure to get a DRE. If you have any cancer the T will make the cells multiply much faster."​

An MRI on what? My nuts? Not sure what you mean here. (I'm picturing my nuts in an MRI machine right now . . . they'd get a bit lost.)

The only think I can put low T down to is ageing, having always worked at high stress levels - and giving up smoking.

I watch the risk of prostate cancer - PSA levels are low (0.7, range 0.3-4.5), DREs always check out negative.

BoBoy: I sure as hell want to get off Prozac! It takes the edge off everything - but it takes it off the good bits as well.
 
As you most likely know by now, codeine can and does cause about half of the symptoms you are trying to conquer. I too have suffered migraines my whole life. Have you ever tried imitrex? I have my own share of experience with different pain killers due to multiple back surgeries, knees, etc too many to list. I am completely off painkillers for the last 6 months because i was having bad symptoms that I could not attribute to anything else. Most of which you stated above. Yes, your T is low and hopefully you get that in balance. I was just curious if you have tried anything else for the headaches that would cause less side effects. Imitrex is injectable, and aside from about 20 min of feeling a little sick, the sides are surprisingly minimal. It also works on headaches that some doctors would not characterize as migraines. Just trying to help.
 
On my cell at the moment. Thanks for the props. MRI of your pituitary and brain in general. There are some types of brain pressure that most drugs don't help with. I have 3 cysts. One of them is pushing parts of my brain, but I rarely get a migraine others do. Hope that made sense. The only way I can explain the migraine I get is sort of like a short duration brain freeze. Anyways if this is what's causing your migraines there are easier ways to get relief.

Hopefully you can get off the Prozac, that's what my doc wanted to put me on. T has improved a lot in my life. I was also close to needing to take insulin shots, t helped me there too.
 
Thanks guys. One thing I like about this board is the tone: "Try to get off the codeine and alcohol" rather than "get off it, you bloody idiot". I guess it's because if you're on this forum you've been there and know it isn't so easy sometimes.

That's the plan - get off everything negative. The main reason I put the personal history in there was to show that I'm familiar with high performance, and I'm struggling at the moment. It's not a matter of turning myself into someone I'm not - it's a matter of getting back to where I was.

The codein-based painkillers have been with me for 45 years. I get headaches and I have been through everything to prevent them and failed, now I just treat the symptom as I can't find the cause. (I didn't graduate from uni because I had a headache for six months.)

Alcohol: I love it as a social lubricant, and usually it causes no problem, but I'm dependent on it at the moment. Why? Because life is so bloody hard.

One thing which I didn't mention in my original post: Depression was a severe problem for me last year and the transdermal T has dramatically lessened that. I am going in the right direction.

But I repeat: The goal is to do it ALL right. No anti-depressants, no sleeping pills, no alcohol, nothing other than good stuff. But to get there when life is so bad with low T - that's very, very difficult, so I'm pinning my hopes on getting there this way.

Hey BigFella - your exactly right , alot of us have been where you are ....I've been a smoker , drinker , drugger and been prescribed every anti-depressant and sleeping pill known to man . And pain pills ? Don"t get me started , I"m an active dirt biker and ATVer and have broke just about every main bone in my body , thus took boatloads of pain pills . I"ve also seen what these drugs do to the body , both short term and long term . And its not good .

5 years ago I gave up all the alcohol and nicotine and pharma crap except for small doses of statin for cholesterol and a hypertention med and low dose aspirin . I told my doc I won"t ask for an anti-depressant if you won"t offer one . So far so good .

The biggest change has been the testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) , that was the missing puzzle piece . The last 2 months have been great , tons of energy and the muscles are hardening bigtime .

Its all up to you where you want to take this , quit it all or tackle one problem at a time . Good luck . ~Bo
 
Methos

Yes, I have tried imitrex. It worked well for me for acute migraines, but it was incredibly expensive (>$120 per shot) whereas panadol/codeine tabs are OTC in Australia and very cheap (<$1 per dose). Also the panadeine tabs are better at avoiding getting to the acute migraine stage.

Also, when the pain was bad, even though the spring loaded syringes were really simple to use, a few times I managed to spray $120 shots around the bathroom instead of in my leg.

Anyway, I am deliberately treating myself really badly ATM so I can get a blood test in 36 hours which will give me my second sub-par T score so I can get on LEGAL and CHEAP TRT. Please God make that number under 250. (Hang on, just remembered I'm atheist.)

Spent half of today with a client who is into BB. I came away inspired even though the BB subject didn't come up. I'm going to do this right. (3J - here I come . . . What was that about diet?)
 
Stay up all night and avoid all caffeine. Caffeine can and will spike t levels. The lack of sleep is guaranteed to drop your number.

I did not know this. I take tons of caffeine just try to get through the day due to the exhaustion I am feeling. Maybe I will try to cut it out. Headaches here I come... Thanks for the info.
 
I am a very happy chappie.

Thanks to all for the advice. Frustrated1: You are a hero.

Total Testosterone: 46 (250 to 1100) on the US scale. It measured 1.6 nmol/L (8.0-38.0) on the Aussie scale. This, paired with my prior reading of 5.2 nmol/L gives me two readings under 8.0, which means that I qualify for Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) in Australia.

My T readings have been, since September last year, as follows (I'll use the US scale):

15 Sep 2011 297
8 Nov 2011 282
3 Jan 2012 245
5 Apr 2012 150
26 Apr 2012 46

So why has this happened?

For the first three blood draws I did things "right" - had a nice early night, didn't drink etc, had the draw done before 8:00 am. We don't need to schedule appointments for blood draws here - just turn up, I've never had to wait more than three minutes or so, and it's paid for by Medicare. (Are you jealous yet?) But because of that I only turned up when I was feeling good. If I was feeling like shit I didn't bother going. So the result was always going to be skewed high. Duh. I was drawing blood at the highest possible peaks.

On 5 April I felt like shit and got blood drawn, and it hit 150. I realised then how much it could fluctuate, so I asked for advice and took it, stayed up almost all night, and scored 46. I needed that number.

Now I can go doctor-shopping until I find one who will agree to work with me.

Summary: If you want a low reading, stay up all night, beat yourself into the ground, I had a fair bit of alcohol and I think that helped.

(And as for why my Testosterone levels have dropped since September last year: I think it was because I gave up smoking.)
 
Last edited:
That's really great.

I also did everything wrong, and it really slowed me down. Anyways now I know how things work. My little app research helped this out a lot. I was reading hourly saliva tests. Seems that if you don't sleep, your system can't "reboot", and your testosterone just stays in the toilet until you do sleep.
 
Sorry for bumping an old thread.

How much exactly does alcohol affect testosterone?
Staying up all night is relatively easy as I work fairly late into the nights on a regular basis (1-3am)
however I can't drink alcohol as it will hinder my ability to work the following day.
I'm currently sitting at 302 free test which is barely above the bare minimum (Also in Australia)
 
Back
Top