got my test levels checked

I would be mad and then go on with life. I would also accept some personal responsibility.

I wouldn't feel the need to keep rehashing it over and over again. I wouldn't keep posting it everywhere regardless of whether or not it is remotely relevant. I wouldn't keep trying to freak out new members. I wouldn't obsess over everything. I wouldn't keep freaking out with anxiety over my treatment and feeling the need to spew verbal diarrhea all the time. I wouldn't keep sending pointless PM's to everyone. I wouldn't keep asking the same questions over and over again until I get the answer I hope to hear. I wouldn't ask for advice that I have no intention of following or utilizing. I wouldn't keep quoting a quack doctor like I am some disciple of his.

I apologize for the inconvenience this may cause you. I'm human too. And think of this as my form of therapy too.

OH YEAH??!

Well, I have a belly button. :D


I bet you feel better LOL. Poor Apollon! :worried:
 
Total is indicative of overall HPTA health while free is what does the work. Bioavailable and free T are the same thing by the way. ;)

Yes... feeling much better.

Actually, Free-T and Bioavailable T technically are not the same thing.

Most circulating testosterone is bound to sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), which in men also is called testosterone-binding globulin. A lesser fraction is albumin bound and a small proportion exists as free hormone. Historically, only the free testosterone was thought to be the biologically active component. However, testosterone is weakly bound to serum albumin and dissociates freely in the capillary bed, thereby becoming readily available for tissue uptake. All non-SHBG-bound testosterone is therefore considered bioavailable.
 
I would be mad and then go on with life. I would also accept some personal responsibility.

I wouldn't feel the need to keep rehashing it over and over again. I wouldn't keep posting it everywhere regardless of whether or not it is remotely relevant. I wouldn't keep trying to freak out new members. I wouldn't obsess over everything. I wouldn't keep freaking out with anxiety over my treatment and feeling the need to spew verbal diarrhea all the time. I wouldn't keep sending pointless PM's to everyone. I wouldn't keep asking the same questions over and over again until I get the answer I hope to hear. I wouldn't ask for advice that I have no intention of following or utilizing. I wouldn't keep quoting a quack doctor like I am some disciple of his.

I apologize for the inconvenience this may cause you. I'm human too. And think of this as my form of therapy too.

You listed them off so matter-of-factly it was like I was re-living every last one :)
 
Yes... feeling much better.

Actually, Free-T and Bioavailable T technically are not the same thing.

Most circulating testosterone is bound to sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), which in men also is called testosterone-binding globulin. A lesser fraction is albumin bound and a small proportion exists as free hormone. Historically, only the free testosterone was thought to be the biologically active component. However, testosterone is weakly bound to serum albumin and dissociates freely in the capillary bed, thereby becoming readily available for tissue uptake. All non-SHBG-bound testosterone is therefore considered bioavailable.

See now that is interesting as Quest diagnostics and a couple other medical facilities treat it the same with regards to ordering tests. I know some list it separately, but the same value is given for both FT and BT. SHBG-bound and unbound T would be total, whereas the unbound hormone would be free. You kind of left the emphasis off the part:
All non-SHBG-bound testosterone is therefore considered bioavailable.
You stinker. :p
Source

As Free test is unbound, and all unbound testosterone is bioavailable, free test therefore equals bioavailable.

Quot Erat Demonstratum. :cool:
 
See now that is interesting as Quest diagnostics and a couple other medical facilities treat it the same with regards to ordering tests. I know some list it separately, but the same value is given for both FT and BT. SHBG-bound and unbound T would be total, whereas the unbound hormone would be free. You kind of left the emphasis off the part:

You stinker. :p
Source

As Free test is unbound, and all unbound testosterone is bioavailable, free test therefore equals bioavailable.

Quot Erat Demonstratum. :cool:

Ha! You found my source. :-)

The difference is the T bound to Albumin. Albumin bound T is not Free, but it is Bioavailable. Therefore they are no equal. At least that is how I read this. Am I missing something? Maybe if someone drew up a Venn Diagram that would help. :-)
 
Ha! You found my source. :-)

The difference is the T bound to Albumin. Albumin bound T is not Free, but it is Bioavailable. Therefore they are no equal. At least that is how I read this. Am I missing something? Maybe if someone drew up a Venn Diagram that would help. :-)

Except the testosterone not bound to SHBG is considered "free", even though it is technically bound to a protein in blood plasma (Albumin).

You ask and you shall receive!
C8sNOQI.png



:p

Edit: Technically all the "free" testosterone on the right side is also bio-available testosterone too. I know, it's confusing as hell. :spin:
 
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But the Test bound to Albumin is not considered to be Free. You keep saying non-SHBG bound test is free. But by definition it isn't free. It is just bioavailable. It is probably soon to be free, but just not at the moment the lab test was performed.
 
Here's what I am reading. Test can be found in three states.

Bound to SHBG
Bound to Albumin
Not Bound to anything (Free)

Free Test is only the last category which is not bound to anything.

Bioavailable is Free Test + Albumin Bound Test.
 
But the Test bound to Albumin is not considered to be Free. You keep saying non-SHBG bound test is free. But by definition it isn't free. It is just bioavailable. It is probably soon to be free, but just not at the moment the lab test was performed.

Except that testosterone not bound to SHBG is called free. I don't make the rules or naming conventions silly. When I actually wake up, I'll have to find a good source for you. :)
 
Why have different names if they are the same thing?

Since when does the medical community make sense? Damn, this omelette is gooooooood.

Edit: Ya know what Mega, I'm actually starting to get confused here. I keep reading studies and clinical trials that identify ONLY free versus total testosterone; with a footnote about albumin bound in the free, while others cite that free/albumin-bound are bio avail, but that free itself is a subcategory of albumin-bound as it is truly free, and not bound to any proteins.

I think I stand by my statement above in that the medical community makes absolutely no sense sometimes. :spin:
 
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Except the testosterone not bound to SHBG is considered "free", even though it is technically bound to a protein in blood plasma (Albumin).

You ask and you shall receive!
C8sNOQI.png





:p

Edit: Technically all the "free" testosterone on the right side is also bio-available testosterone too. I know, it's confusing as hell. :spin:



Is there a Testosterone for dummies version? :)
 
Yes.

Testosterone good.

Prolactin bad.

Free testosterone very good.

Estradiol bad. But need some.

Bio-available testosterone very good too.

Four and a half hours of sleep is not good. :(



What would be considered a good free Test number, my doctor seems to put a little more stock into a persons free Test number rather than there TT number?
 
What would be considered a good free Test number, my doctor seems to put a little more stock into a persons free Test number rather than there TT number?

The upper range of course is desired. I'm one of those that doesn't put a lot of stock into docs using this as a means to judge testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) effectiveness though as SHBG most certainly effects this value - which is different for everyone. Free T is the only test that I've been popped for by my doc. Thankfully, he's pretty clueless and ordered it on accident. Proviron + testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) = triple the upper range... OOPS!

For your reference: 35-155ng/dL is the average range seen in labs.
 
So is Free T and Sex hormone Binding Globulin different? If so do we want a high or a low Sex hormone Binding Globulin number?
 
So is Free T and Sex hormone Binding Globulin different? If so do we want a high or a low Sex hormone Binding Globulin number?

Free T is the amount of hormone not bound to (rendering it unused for anabolic purposes) SHBG. We want a lower SHBG, but not too low as you do need bound testosterone for other purposes. There's actually some research going on with testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) non-responders that have too low of an SHBG; somehow rendering (as the theory goes) exogenous testosterone useless for them. I don't know the science behind this theory to be honest, but as the body tends to like things in a certain balance (think E2 vs. TT), it makes some sense to me.
 
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