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Yozzer said:I am beginning to believe that training hard, even training full stop, is simply is not worth it at this moment in time. I will see very little benefits if any at all. I am going to try arimidex and clomid combined. If this does not work, then I will start taking steroids. This is the only option I will have left if i want to continue in trying to improve my body. I have worked very hard for years and seen little benefits so the only conclusion I can make is that I have always had low testosterone, and probabaly made it worse by not taking steroids correctly in my more niave days 12-18 months ago. It has been nearly 9 months since my low testosterone levels came to light and nothing has changed despite the feeble efforts of my doctor and the endocrinologist. I now also have an estrogen imbalance.
I will know in about 1 month if the arimidex has worked. If it has the doc will be off my back and i won't need test replacement. If it has not worked then i will go straight into a cycle. Then, by the time my next blood test comes around, I will have finished my course and will be on primo so my levels will be low once again and I will be prescribed test injections. This can be to my advantage. I assume I will have regular check ups being on test replacement. I will time my cycle to finish with enough time to inject the prescribed test so that my levels are within the expected range. Not only will this keep the endo happy to give me test replacement, but it will be sufficient for me to bridge with, along with the primo.
I realise test replacement is not ideal for everyone. However, this is my last and only option. I have tried everything else, and i am not prepared to be held back/prevented from reaching my goals because of low testosterone.
Any thoughts/good advice would be most helpful.
Yozzer
Stew Meat said:
"Baseline testosterone levels in men increase in response to resistance training."
Staron, R.S., Karapondo, D.L., Kraemer, W.J., Fry, A.C., Gordon, S.E. (1994). "Skeletal muscle adaptations during early phase of heavy-resistance training in men and women. Journal of Applied Physiology , 76(3), 1247-1255.
Summerfield, Et.Al. (1995) "Tissue-specific pharmacology of testosterone". Molecular Pharmacology , 47, 1080-1088
Heavy resistance training can permanantly raise testosterone levels, not lower them.
-Stew
Stew Meat said:The studies I quoted showed increases in baseline testosteore. These were not temporary. Further, injecting 100mg/wk of testosterone will shut down your own production. One normally produces 45-100mg per week. If you inject 100mg/wk, your body will stop producing in an effort to regulate itself. It will also transcribe additional aromitase enzymes in order for the body to reach homeostasis with estrogen/testostereone ratios.
Those who bridge between cycles with testosterone do so usually because they are uneducated as to the detremental effects that it can have on HPTA or they simply don't care. If one comes off the cycle, uses clomid and antiestrogens to jump start endogenous production, baseline levels return quickly and gains and strength are kept. If one does not and merely bridges with 100mg/wk, he inhibits his HPTA from recouperation for long periods of time which can have serious long term consequences on baseline testosterone levels.
Yozzer, use hormone replacement as a last resort. Once you start, you may never be able to recouperate your natural production and may be on homrone threapy for an extremely long time if not for the rest of your life. Never supress your HPTA unless necessary. This is why people don't bridge with testosterone, but low dose primo and/or anavar. The longer you supress your own levels, the harder it is to bounce back. You haven't bounced back yet. If I were you, I'd stay as far away from exogenous hormone as I could for a long time. Workout and try to increase your levels nautrally along side clomid and antiestrogen thereapy.
-Stew
Horny said:
"YOu can recover testossterone levels even if you are on 100mg/week( idon't know about more) for 15 years.
I said that 100mg/week will shut down your own testosterone production. You didn't read my post. I said that it will shut down your own testosterone levels"
Horny said:
Aromatase will not upregulate in repsonse to higher levels of testosterone in the normal range (in fact I don't think it ever will really upregulate unless their is tons of estrogen floating around).
Do not call me uneducated. I have extensive first hand experience with this and I am correct."
Horny said:
Do not call me uneducated.
Bridging with primo or anavar is the foolish thing to do... It shuts off your own testosterone levels and you don't get any testosterone in return, you just get these synthetic chemicals in your blood. You get bad reactions with your lipid profile this way, you can get erection difficulties, you get bone problems, and other things. Why would you want to replace testosterone with somethng other than testosterone?
Stew Meat said:
High levels of estrogen will cause the concentration of aromatase enzymes to increase. Yep, you're a genious!
I need to start relying on you instead of books and research for my knowlege.
-Stew