New member learning about Test Cyp

BigWil4006

New Member
Wanted to introduce myself and see if I was on the right track. I'm in the US and turn 40 in April, played D1 tennis and have continued this level for most years after I graduated. I did have a few bad years health wise when Covid hit, found out I had a bad root canal tooth that was done in college, giving constant headaches, fatigue and stomach issues. I've only recently figure that out after extracting that bad too Christmas of 2024. Peptides and bone broth have helped heal my gut issues and now I'm starting to focus on my hormones. Last year I was test it was low 400's and am going start Test Cyp for my 40th birthday.

I'm going to do another round of blood work before I start and was wondering if someone has a good list of blood markers. I'll start studying up on those.

I was also clicking on all the adds here in forum and was curious about those, just been comparing prices
 
For TRT it’s pretty simple and straightforward.

Test these labs before starting TRT to establish your baseline, and continue monitoring them after beginning treatment. During the first year, you’ll check them fairly often (typically every 3 or 4 months) to see how your body responds. Once your levels are stable and predictable, testing can usually be reduced to every 6 months, and eventually once a year after several years of consistent, steady results.


CBC (Complete Blood Count) is the single most important lab on TRT. Testosterone stimulates red blood cell production, which can raise hematocrit and hemoglobin. If hematocrit climbs too high, blood becomes more viscous (“thicker”), increasing the risk of clotting, stroke, and cardiovascular strain.


Estradiol (since you are male, you will need the “ultra sensitive” or “sensitive” estradiol test). Excess estradiol can lead to symptoms like gynecomastia (breast tissue growth), water retention, mood changes, and libido issues, while levels that are too low can cause joint pain, low libido, and poor cardiovascular support.

(I recommend not trying to drive estradiol excessively low. Estradiol is essential for health. Medications to lower E2 are generally only needed if you experience symptoms of high estrogen. On a properly dosed TRT regimen, estradiol should remain in a healthy range; if it’s elevated, the safer approach is usually to adjust your testosterone dose downward rather than aggressively suppress estrogen)


Lipids (cholesterol) is important because TRT can negatively affect cholesterol balance, particularly by lowering HDL (“good” cholesterol) and, in some cases, raising LDL.


CMP (Comprehensive Metabolic Panel) matters on TRT because it shows how well your body is tolerating the therapy overall. It checks liver enzymes to catch liver stress, kidney markers to monitor filtration and hydration status, electrolytes that affect blood pressure and heart rhythm, and glucose to flag changes in blood sugar control. It’s a broad safety panel that helps put the rest of your labs in context.


PSA (Prostate-Specific Antigen) is important on TRT because testosterone can stimulate prostate tissue. Monitoring PSA helps detect prostate enlargement or early signs of prostate cancer, especially in older men or those with risk factors. Regular PSA checks give a baseline and allow trends to be tracked safely over time.

Total Testosterone measures the overall amount of testosterone in your blood, including both the fraction bound to proteins and the fraction that’s free.


Free Testosterone measures only the unbound portion that is biologically active and able to enter cells to exert effects.

Free Testosterone and Total Testosterone simply help identify how you’re responding to a particular dosage. Everyone responds a little differently. 100mg a week might put me at 1000 (ng/dL) but you might only reach 600 (ng/dL).


You’ll hear about other blood markers, but for standard TRT, the ones mentioned here are the most important. Other labs typically only become critical if you start using higher testosterone doses or additional compounds, where more specialized monitoring is required for safety.
 
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Thanks that’s great info!

I’ve been reading up on how hormones can be turned into estrogen so I’m trying to get a little leaner before I start trt. I was at 220lbs and probably high 20's body fat percentage. Ive been on Reta for about 6 months and am down to 210lbs 22% base off one of those fancy scales. Not sure how accurate those are. I was thinking about running HGH and reta to reduce fat but HGH has been hard to find recently. Do you know why?

My dad had prostate cancer but that started in his 70's so my doctor wasnt super concerned about it being genetically pasted down but I will put the PSA on my bloodwork. Of course my dad isn't crazy about the TRT idea. I feel like I see more cardiovascular related deaths in this world than prostate cancer
 
I get the desire to lose weight, but adding GH and Reta before you’ve ever tried testosterone on its own is a bad move. You should always introduce one new compound at a time so you can actually see how your body responds.

Since you’d be starting at a therapeutic dose, there’s really no justification for stacking anything on top of TRT right out of the gate. No knowledgeable person is going to recommend running GH and Reta before you even know how you respond to testosterone alone.

Start slow. Slow and steady wins the race.

Do a full year on TRT, clean up your diet, eat less, train consistently, and lose weight the boring way…diet and exercise. See how you respond first. After a year of stable TRT, then reassess and decide if anything else is truly necessary.

I couldn’t edit my previous post, so I want to add this: checking lipids every 3–4 months isn’t necessary, even during your first year on TRT.

Get a baseline before you start. After that, you can optionally recheck around the 6 month mark if you want a general idea of how things are trending, but it’s a good idea to check again at the 1 year point and assess where you’re at.

If health is the priority, the other blood markers I mentioned are the ones that should be monitored more closely during the first year. Checking those about every 12-16 weeks is a reasonable and safe schedule until you understand how you respond.
 
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