[quote]therajraj wrote:
[quote]butcherman7 wrote:
[quote]Yogi wrote:
[quote]Davinci.v2 wrote:
[quote]flipcollar wrote:
I don’t see any reason, based on what he’s said here, to get more bloodwork done. That seems excessive. He didn’t say anything about symptoms, so there’s no reason to believe there’s something actually wrong with this guy. Beyond that, we know nothing about how long he’s been lifting, what he does when he lifts, or what his diet really looks like (he didn’t even include protein intake, while he did fee broccoli was worth mentioning).
So, all that being said, I will address the OP directly. OP, your testosterone is fine. Don’t waste your money on testosterone boosters. They’ll deliver little to no real-world results. The money spent on such supplements would be better spent on food, or a high quality workout drink like Plazma. Plazma is the best supplement money can buy, IMO.[/quote]
His test levels for his age are not fine.[/quote]
they’re within the normal physiological range and he hasn’t mentioned any dysfunction[/quote]
[/quote]
Well then…
OP if you’re already living a life conducive to high T then I highly doubt you’ll make a jump to the normal range naturally by simply adding supplements.
T levels for your age should be in the 600-800 range I believe.
Your options are to either accept your current quality of life as it currently is or take drugs.
[/quote]
That’s not necessarily true either. OP, at your age there’s a high likelihood that your low T has an identifiable cause. Typically it’s a combination of stress/adrenal fatigue, hypothyroidism (often sub clinical), porn addiction (can cause ED and domamine desensitization issues), phthalates, xenoestrogens etc.
T boosting supplements aren’t going to do much of anything. I would educate yourself as much as possible. Also worth mentioning is no 20 year old is going to be asymptomatic with T levels in the 300’s.
OP, refer to your TRT thread with KSman’s advice. I suggest you follow it.