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anyone know what kind of test the doctors give ??

PSYCHOPATHIC

New member
ok let me explain.
my buddy is on a cycle of t200 and Deca and he went to get his blood work done in the middle of his cycle and they found that he had a bad heart vaulve he told them he was on roids but they said it probaly had nothen to do with it. but they told him to get off. so they told him if he wants to get off they will give him small amounts of test to tapper off.?lol so he said ok he has to go in monday what kind of test do you think the doctors wil give him? also he told them the wanted some clomid for when he's done and he said the doctor acted like he didn't know shit about it? what do you guys think?


Killer..................
 
You can't expect a doctor to be an expert in everything. 99% don't know anything about cycling anabolics. Doctors don't realize that a fertility drug can help jump start your natural testosterone.

The kind of testosterone that he'll give him will be androderm which is transdermal.


-Stew
 
Bump what Weam said. I had bloodwork taken 3 times over the past year and everytime the results came back, the total testosterone was 330,290,310 so they put me on Androgel. My advice to your buddy is to ask for the injections because it is a pain in the ass to rub the gel on everyday. Trust me. Plus there will be days you forget. Also my family doctor didnt really know much on the anabolic subject and the endocrinologist was also unsure about alot of things.
 
Sometimes a little knowledge is worse than none. Weam there a plenty of studies, going back several years, about the use of clomiphene in men with fertility problems. At this point it is a pretty well documented treatment.
As far as knowing what course of treatment a doctor will prescribe, NO ONE KNOWS. Different doctors use different drugs and different methods. The reason being that there is no official stance by the AMA on the use of steroids. Because there are no guidlines and there is no consensus doctors are on their own and they have wildly different courses of treatment using steroids from one doctor to the next. If you think because you've been given a little test by a doctor to treat your condition that that is the way any other doctor might prescribe AAS to anyone else you are mistaken.
 
Just one?

J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1995 Dec;80(12):3546-52 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut


Effect of raising endogenous testosterone levels in impotent men with secondary hypogonadism: double blind placebo-controlled trial with clomiphene citrate.

Guay AT, Bansal S, Heatley GJ.

Section of Endocrinology, Lahey Clinic, Burlington, Massachusetts 01805, USA.

Secondary hypogonadism is not an infrequent abnormality in older patients presenting with the primary complaint of erectile dysfunction. Because of the role of testosterone in mediating sexual desire and erectile function in men, these patients are usually treated with exogenous testosterone, which, while elevating the circulating androgens, suppresses gonadotropins from the hypothalamic-pituitary axis. The response of this form of therapy, although extolled in the lay literature, has usually not been effective in restoring or even improving sexual function. This failure of response could be the result of suppression of gonadotropins or the lack of a cause and effect relationship between sexual function and circulating androgens in this group of patients. Further, because exogenous testosterone can potentially increase the risk of prostate disease, it is important to be sure of the benefit sought, i.e. an increase in sexual function. In an attempt to answer this question, we measured the hormone levels and studied the sexual function in 17 patients with erectile dysfunction who were found to have secondary hypogonadism. This double blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over study consisted of treatment with clomiphene citrate and a placebo for 2 months each. Similar to our previous observations, LH, FSH, and total and free testosterone levels showed a significant elevation in response to clomiphene citrate over the response to placebo.
 
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