📚 Patient Education • Terminology Guide

The Ultimate TRT Glossary

Navigating hormonal health can be complex. This comprehensive guide breaks down the essential medical terms, hormones, and protocols you need to understand for successful treatment.

Medical Terminology & Definitions

Understand the science behind your treatment.

A

AAS (Anabolic-Androgenic Steroids)

A broad category of compounds that includes testosterone and synthetic derivatives. While TRT is the medical use of bio-identical testosterone to restore normal levels, “cycles” of AAS typically involve supraphysiologic (far higher than natural) doses for performance enhancement.

Why it matters: Distinguishing between therapeutic medical care and recreational use is vital for safety and legal status.

See safe reference ranges

AI (Aromatase Inhibitor)

Medication (such as anastrozole or exemestane) that reduces the conversion of testosterone into estradiol. While sometimes necessary, they are often overused in older protocols. Aggressive use can “crash” estrogen levels, leading to joint pain and mood instability.

Why it matters: Estrogen is essential for men’s health. Blocking it unnecessarily can ruin the benefits of TRT.

Check high/low E2 symptoms

Anastrozole (Arimidex)

A common prescription Aromatase Inhibitor. It is a potent medication sometimes prescribed when estradiol levels are significantly elevated AND accompanied by specific symptoms like water retention or nipple sensitivity.

Why it matters: Should only be used under strict medical supervision to avoid hormonal imbalances.

Aromatase / Aromatization

The enzymatic process that converts a portion of your testosterone into estradiol (E2). This is not a “bad” process; it is the primary way men produce estrogen, which is necessary for brain, bone, and sexual health.

Why it matters: Understanding this natural balance prevents the fear-mongering often seen around estrogen in men.

View E2 Markers

B

Baseline Labs

Comprehensive bloodwork performed before starting TRT. This confirms the diagnosis of hypogonadism and establishes a safety baseline for markers like prostate health (PSA), red blood cells (CBC), and lipids.

Why it matters: You cannot treat what you haven’t measured. Required for safe prescription.

See required baseline markers

Bioavailable Testosterone

The fraction of testosterone in the blood that is readily available for tissues to use. It includes free testosterone plus testosterone loosely bound to albumin. It is often a more accurate measure of hormonal status than Total Testosterone alone.

Why it matters: Explains why some men have “normal” total levels but still experience symptoms.

C

Cardiometabolic Risk

A combination of risk factors including obesity, high blood pressure, abnormal lipids, and insulin resistance. Low testosterone is frequently associated with poor cardiometabolic health.

Why it matters: TRT can improve these factors, but monitoring is essential to ensure heart health.

View Lipid Markers

CBC (Complete Blood Count)

A standard blood test that measures cells in your blood, including red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. In TRT context, it is crucial for monitoring Hematocrit and Hemoglobin.

Why it matters: TRT stimulates red blood cell production; levels must be monitored to prevent blood thickening.

Check HCT/Hb details

Cypionate (Test C)

Testosterone Cypionate is one of the most common injectable esters used in TRT. The “ester” attached to the testosterone determines how slowly it is released into the bloodstream, allowing for weekly or bi-weekly dosing.

Why it matters: Understanding your ester helps explain why injection frequency matters for stable levels.

D

DHT (Dihydrotestosterone)

A potent androgen created when testosterone interacts with the 5-alpha reductase enzyme. It is responsible for many male characteristics. While linked to hair loss in genetically predisposed men, it is also crucial for libido and mood.

Why it matters: Crushing DHT to save hair can sometimes result in loss of libido; it’s a balancing act.

Dose Frequency

The schedule of your administration (e.g., once weekly, twice weekly, every other day). More frequent dosing generally results in more stable blood levels with fewer “peaks and troughs.”

Why it matters: Adjusting frequency is often a better way to manage side effects than adding more medications.

See Peak/Trough symptoms

E

E2 / Estradiol

The primary form of estrogen in men. It is essential for libido, joint health, brain function, and bone density. In TRT, we treat symptoms and the patient’s wellbeing, not just the number on the lab report.

Why it matters: Both high and low estradiol can cause issues; finding your “sweet spot” is key.

See E2 Symptom Decoder

ED (Erectile Dysfunction)

The inability to get or keep an erection. While low testosterone is a cause, it is multifactorial. Sleep apnea, vascular health, stress, alcohol, and medications (SSRIs) play major roles.

Why it matters: TRT helps the hormonal aspect, but may not “cure” ED if vascular or psychological issues exist.

Enanthate (Test E)

A common injectable testosterone ester very similar to Cypionate. They are often interchangeable in a medical context depending on pharmacy availability.

Why it matters: Knowing your specific medication helps track half-life and dosing timing.

F

Free Testosterone (FT)

The small percentage (approx 2-3%) of testosterone that is unbound to proteins (SHBG and albumin) and free to enter cells. It often correlates better with patient symptoms than Total Testosterone.

Why it matters: You can have high Total T but low Free T (due to high SHBG), leaving you still feeling symptomatic.

View Hormonal Markers

FSH (Follicle-Stimulating Hormone)

A pituitary hormone that signals the testes to produce sperm. Exogenous testosterone (TRT) typically suppresses FSH, which can lead to reduced fertility while on treatment.

Why it matters: If maintaining fertility is a priority, this must be discussed with your doctor before starting.

H

HCG (Human Chorionic Gonadotropin)

A medication that mimics LH (Luteinizing Hormone) to stimulate the testes to produce their own testosterone and sperm, even while on TRT. It helps maintain testicular size and fertility.

Why it matters: Essential for men who wish to preserve fertility or prevent testicular atrophy.

Hematocrit (HCT)

The percentage of your blood volume made up of red blood cells. TRT stimulates red blood cell production. If HCT gets too high, the blood becomes thicker, potentially increasing cardiovascular risk.

Why it matters: A critical safety marker. High HCT is often worsened by dehydration or untreated sleep apnea.

See CBC Safety Markers

HPG Axis

Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Gonadal Axis. The feedback loop between your brain and testes. TRT introduces outside hormones, which signals the brain to stop its own production, suppressing this axis.

Why it matters: Explains why natural production stops on TRT and why Post Cycle Therapy (PCT) is needed if stopping.

Hypogonadism

The clinical medical term for low testosterone. It requires both consistent symptoms (fatigue, libido loss, etc.) AND biochemical confirmation via blood tests.

Why it matters: This is the medical diagnosis required for a legitimate TRT prescription.

I – L

IM Injection (Intramuscular)

The traditional method of injecting testosterone deep into the muscle (usually glute, deltoid, or quad). It ensures steady absorption.

Why it matters: Correct technique minimizes discomfort and ensures the medication works as intended.

LH (Luteinizing Hormone)

A pituitary hormone that signals the testes to produce testosterone. In Primary Hypogonadism, LH is often high (brain is yelling, testes aren’t listening). In Secondary Hypogonadism, LH is low (brain isn’t sending the signal).

Why it matters: Helps the doctor determine the cause of your low testosterone.

View Hormone Signaling

Libido vs. Erectile Function

Libido is sexual desire (drive). Erectile function is the physical mechanics. They are distinct. You can have high desire but poor mechanics (vascular issue), or perfect mechanics but no desire (hormonal/stress).

Why it matters: Helps communicate symptoms accurately to your doctor for better treatment targeting.

P

Peak / Trough

The highest (peak) and lowest (trough) levels of testosterone in your blood between injections. Peaks occur 24-48 hours after injection; troughs happen right before the next dose.

Why it matters: If you feel moody or tired right before your next shot, your trough might be too low.

Identify timing symptoms

Prolactin

A hormone primarily responsible for milk production in women, but present in men. Elevated levels (often from stress or pituitary issues) can kill libido and cause erectile dysfunction even if testosterone is normal.

Why it matters: A key marker to rule out other causes of sexual dysfunction.

PSA (Prostate-Specific Antigen)

A protein produced by the prostate. It is the primary marker used to screen for prostate issues. TRT doesn’t cause prostate cancer, but it must be monitored to ensure existing issues aren’t exacerbated.

Why it matters: Mandatory safety monitoring for men, especially those aged 40+.

See PSA Safety info

S

SHBG (Sex Hormone Binding Globulin)

A protein that binds to testosterone and carries it through the blood. T bound to SHBG is biologically inactive. High SHBG reduces Free Testosterone; low SHBG increases clearance rate.

Why it matters: It dictates your dosing frequency and why your “Total T” might not match your symptoms.

Sleep Apnea

A sleep disorder where breathing stops and starts. It is a major cause of low testosterone naturally, but also a risk factor for high hematocrit (thick blood) whilst on TRT.

Why it matters: Must be treated (CPAP etc.) to ensure TRT is safe and effective.

T

Total Testosterone (TT)

The total amount of testosterone circulating in your blood, including what is bound to proteins. It is the broad “snapshot” of your hormonal status.

Why it matters: The primary number used for diagnosis, though Free T gives more detail.

TRT (Testosterone Replacement Therapy)

The medical protocol of replacing testosterone in men who cannot produce enough naturally. The goal is to restore levels to a healthy physiological range to resolve symptoms.

Why it matters: Distinct from “cycling” or performance enhancement; focused on health and longevity.

Book consultation

Blood work analysis and medical results

Patient Cheat Sheets

Quick reference guides for blood work and symptom management.

🩸 Common Blood Markers Decoder

Total Testosterone (TT)
The overall tank level. Used for primary diagnosis.
Free Testosterone (FT)
What actually gets into cells. Low FT = symptoms, even if TT is normal.
SHBG
The “Handbrake.” High levels bind up T so your body can’t use it.
Estradiol (E2)
Goldilocks hormone. Too high or too low causes issues. Don’t crush it to zero.
LH / FSH
Brain signals. High = Testicular failure. Low = Brain signal issue.
Hematocrit (HCT)
Safety Marker. Measures blood thickness. Must be monitored to prevent stroke risk.
PSA
Safety Marker. Prostate health monitoring. Essential for men 40+.

🩺 TRT “Feel” Symptom Decoder

Interpreting how you feel to guide conversation with your doctor.

High Estrogen (E2) Vibes

  • Water retention / bloating
  • Emotional volatility (crying at commercials)
  • Nipple sensitivity or spicy sensation
  • Libido is high but erections are soft
  • Oilier skin / Acne flares

Low Estrogen (E2) Vibes

  • Joint pain / Clicking joints
  • Flat mood / Anhedonia (lack of joy)
  • Weak erections / loss of morning wood
  • Frequent urination
  • Anxiety and irritability

Dose Too High / Peaks

  • Insomnia / Racing thoughts
  • High Blood Pressure (Headaches)
  • Red flushed skin
  • Feeling “wired” or aggressive
  • Resting heart rate increase

Dose Too Low / Troughs

  • Return of original low T symptoms
  • Fatigue late in the week (before shot)
  • Low motivation
  • Poor recovery from exercise
  • Brain fog returning

⚠️ Important Context: Symptoms are clues, not diagnosis. Always confirm “vibes” with actual blood work before changing protocols. Sleep, stress, and diet often mimic these hormonal symptoms.

📋 Ready to check your levels?

Professional Medical Assessment

Now that you understand the terminology, the next step is getting a clear picture of your own health.
Our AHPRA-registered doctors can guide you through the blood work and assessment process.

Comprehensive Consultation Includes:
✓ Review of symptoms and medical history
✓ Referrals for correct blood markers (TT, FT, E2, PSA, etc)
✓ Expert interpretation of your results
✓ Safe, evidence-based treatment plans if eligible

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