Night sweating & TRT, any connection?

Your test is too low bro. And slap your doctor. Are you financialy able to get new doc if so do. It is the ratio of e to t that is important. If you test was 1400 the 20 would be good.

Also twice a week injections is better.

The Allopathic medicine system is the third leading cause of death in the us. (Journal of the American Medical Association)

I had 40 pg/ml with TT 180 a month ago....
Boy was that real. I felt like getting into scraps....
No joke.
Lol
 
Homeopathic is not mainstream medicine. Yes allopathic is term used for mainstream medicine.

Yeah I defenitely can say that I have experienced difficulty controlling my temper when my e2 is high. Makes me understand women in a new way lol
 
Your test is too low bro. And slap your doctor. Are you financialy able to get new doc if so do. It is the ratio of e to t that is important. If you test was 1400 the 20 would be good.

Also twice a week injections is better.

The Allopathic medicine system is the third leading cause of death in the us. (Journal of the American Medical Association)

I take it this means Canada too? Lol
What are the first 2 leading causes of death?
 
Homeopathic is not mainstream medicine. Yes allopathic is term used for mainstream medicine.

Yeah I defenitely can say that I have experienced difficulty controlling my temper when my e2 is high. Makes me understand women in a new way lol

What would be "high" for you?
 
I take it this means Canada too? Lol
What are the first 2 leading causes of death?

I quoted that from His Change of Life, a book about andropause. It says USA unabbreviated. It doesn't say the other causes.

IMO Canada not that different because of what I've read on these forums from Canadians
 
HB is hemoglobin, I believe...basically your red blood cell count. Hemoglobin is the primary thing in red blood cells that allow them to carry oxygen, if I remember high school health classes right.
 
HB is hemoglobin, I believe...basically your red blood cell count. Hemoglobin is the primary thing in red blood cells that allow them to carry oxygen, if I remember high school health classes right.


Gotcha, I always refer to that as hematocrit, now I know why I was confused.
 
I posted on here a while back what I thought were my latest test results. I got them verbally (over the phone) from my doc. Later I got an actual copy of the report and it doesn't resemble the numbers I was given over the phone. I don't know whose results I got, but they weren't mine.

Here is what my numbers look like as of 2 weeks ago:

TT 513 (348-1197)
Hemoglobin 16.0 (12.6-17.7)
Hematocrit 45.9 (37.5-51.0)
Estradiol <5.1 (7.6-42.6)
AST and ALT were a bit high

This is after being on 100mg/week for 6 weeks, no AI.

My GP actually asked about the AI, after seeing the low E2 results. The TRT doc says I just don't have the aromatase enzyme present in my body, and won't produce E2.

Neither doc seems to be very worried about it and maybe I shouldn't be either. I just can't find a single account of any man on TRT having low E2 without crashing it with AI's.

Last week I injected 400mg, this week 200mg and the night sweats have lessened a bit. I've also been turning my a/c down to 69 at night, so that may have more to do with it than the test dose. I feel better than I have in years, so I guess I can deal with the slightly higher electric bill.
 
I've had night sweats for a couple of years now, and for the past 6 months or so I've been experiencing them every night. I'm not on TRT at the moment, but will be starting soon.

I can't definitively say that they are caused by low E2 as that's the one thing I haven't had tested yet, but I've got low ish test levels that my doctor thinks might be contributing to them.

Night sweats seem to be a pretty common occurrence in individuals with hormonal issues.
 
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