question from a user
AlphaMD's Answer
From your lab results alone with no other information or context, we'd say you look to be not immediately primary or secondary hypogonadal.
Taking into account your age & symptoms, it does sounds like you could be relative hypogonadal. The reason being for all relative patients, regardless of your current "okay" T levels numerically, they were clearly higher in the past because all T levels drop over time with age. Since you've had an onset for a set period of time & sofar nothing has improved it, it's probably your levels have reached a point where you can feel the difference now.
The reason why you may have many normal low Testosterone symptoms & have no libido or ED issues is that those are more impacted by DHT. With the amount of T you have, you may have a fine amount of DHT for your needs in that department.
Relative hypogonadal patients are harder to diagnosis, but we do work with them frequently. You should just expect a slightly higher starting T dose than someone who has numerically lower numbers, but you still deserve treatment if you have symptoms.
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