Editor’s note:
Mike wrote to me with his problems and included his thoughts on what he should do. Rather than paraphrase, I have included our correspondence and his thoughts here, so you can understand the eventual conclusion.
Mike – TRT, or not TRT? That is the Question
The first email: Best read with the attached Records:
Basically I had symptoms of low Testosterone as I was having some occasional issues in the bedroom which got worse overtime, which was strange, as normally my sex drive is quite normal to high. It turns out I have very high cortisol and very low DHEA. Apparently DHEA is a precursor to Testosterone, Estrogen and DHT.
Tested my testosterone and it was low normal by some ranges and considered just plain low by others. Some other tests suggested I have early stages of Hypothrodism but this under debate by some doctors. My TSH was 3 and some say anything above 2.1 can lead to issues eventually.
I really don’t have that much stress to cause that amount of high cortisol but I do have ongoing stomach issues which can raise cortisol as well. I have done some tests and I have low stomach acid which is causing my stomach issues with indigestion and all that down the line. This probably raised my cortisol and high cortisol over time can lower DHEA as they both are made by the Adrenals.
I had Dexamethasone suppression tests that proved the Pituitary loop to the Adrenals was working normally and I had a brain scan which did not show anything out of the ordinary. Do not have symptoms of Cushings disease either.
My liver and pancreas show as functioning normal, at least by their standards.
So no one really knows why my cortisol is so high and my DHEA is so low, I think it is probably the stomach and GI issues I have, so cleaning that up and seems to be working a bit so far, but too early to tell.
Since the beginning of my tests, my cortisol has gone form very high to high normal now, but DHEA still low. Usually if the DHEA is supressed by too much cortisol, then after you get the cortisol back down to normal ranges, the DHEA may not come back up for some time if at all, so some doctors give the patient DHEA to get it back up to normal ranges and in many cases the DHEA will stay there even after tapering off the DHEA (or you may need to take just a small maintenance dose of DHEA for some time)
The doctor prescribed me to take some DHEA for awhile and I will start next week.
Because I am taking DHEA which is can cause testosterone, Estrogen and DHT to rise, I have to do tests and keep an eye on this levels, plus will do a PSA test now before I start the DHEA supplementation to watch that as well. I have heard that it is actually the DHT at high levels that can cause issues with your prostate but not sure if that is true or not.
In any event, I will watch all the levels closely. Hope this works as I am not feeling myself these days. My stomach issues are better so that is a start and I suppose my energy levels are getting better slightly recently. Hopefully that means my cortisol is going down more now.
Well that is my story so far, and hopefully this can shed some insight to others
Nick did you see anyting in my words that makes sense or doesn’t make sense?
Please let me know.
Glad to be on the road to recovery!