I think a lot of the questions we see on meso can be summed up in CRs last paragraph
"The truth is that subtle improvements may be seen with regard to body composition, cognition, and overall quality of life. These effects can become more pronounced for those that have naturally lower hormone levels. However, for the vast majority of otherwise healthy individuals, improvements are going to be very subtle."
Yes, this sums is nicely, but let's expand on it a little. The key phrase is "
naturally lower hormone levels". We, here, all know what LabCorp did:
Here is the link to the entire document:
Link
This fact (ref range change) can be interpreted many different ways, but let's take it for face value - this is what world wide study
found to be the norm at present time. I would accept this "fact" (that declining levels are
natural evolution) only if coupled with extended study where the
same test subjects registers same score of "quality of life" as the previous studies(s) where the old ref range was established. Oh wait, quality of life was not scored back then either. Yeah,
quality of life is not medical diagnose.
So, from the above prospective, what constitutes "otherwise
healthy individuals"? You are 25y old male, you go to a doctor and say "My life sucks, I can't achieve/maintain erection, energy level is just enough to get by throughout the day etc..." The doctor looks the Testosterone level - 270 (264-916) and say "According
group of professional associations, government agencies, and commercial entities your testosterone is fine, here is a pill to make you "feel" better about the fact you life sucks..."