So, I’m on UGL Test cyp at 150mg/wk, which I moved up to 180mg/wk in the last two weeks. I performed a Tasso+ blood collection/test 24hrs post injection (60mg injections Mon, Wed, Fri). Blood results came back with my total T at ~2000ng/dl and my estradiol at 126. I’m very skeptical of those values on such a modest dosage. My inclination is that the ELISA based testing they run on these bloods are simply inaccurate.
I don’t know a single person who has 2000ng/dl using <200mg/wk. In fact, I don’t know many people at 2000ng/dl at <300-400mg/wk. Any thoughts on this? I’ve only been on for ~8-9 weeks.
Hardly surprising. I test at 800 to 1000 ng/dl with 100 mg per week on any given day.
What is your aim with drugs: TRT, cyborg TRT, also known as “sports TRT” or TRT-plus, or doing roids?
Your test could be overdosed. Your also pulling labs the next day.
Good question. My plan or aim is a lifelong commitment to being on TRT…with the idea of moving in and out of “sports TRT” and other experimentation along the way. Since I plan to stay on testosterone, it made sense to me to start at TRT dose and titrate up every 4-8wks, getting bloodwork along the way and making note of what my upper limit is for testosterone as it relates to side effects. Finding the highest dosage of testosterone for my body where I don’t need an AI, and my other health-related blood parameters are in a healthy range.
At some point, after I get a very good feel for how my body responds to testosterone only and how various titrations affect me, then perhaps add in other compounds for designated periods of time.
Seems like most reputable UGL on test, its test, and within 5-10 percent. On your theory, if you keep increasing, you just keep moving past baseline. To me, it’s not like you’re going to find, ok, I can cruise at x this way. If you don’t like something like RBC, e2, etc, all of sudden at x, it’s probably well less than X that keeps you at baseline, because you were ramping up. The bigger measure will be when you drop down from your sport TRT to cruise TRT and see how long it takes to get to baseline.
I also personally think that lbm may also have an effect on test levels. At any given dosage, I think that, in general, lower lbm folks may get a higher spike than heavier folks. Guys with a historically higher rate of gear usage will also tend to show lower elevations in t levels, despite possibly having more androgen receptors.
Spreading out the dosage will also flatten that spike.
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