TRT Stabilisation: Dialing in Your Protocol
Understanding the critical 8–12 week window where natural production ceases, exogenous levels stabilise, and long-term dosage is optimised.
Focus: Dosage Titration • Oestradiol Management • Haematocrit Monitoring
Check Your Eligibility for TRT Consultation
Answer 8 questions to see if you meet the basic criteria for a medical assessment. This is not a diagnosis.
What is your age?
TRT consultation requires minimum age criteria
Have you noticed changes in energy levels?
Common concern for men considering consultation
What about changes in body composition?
Physical changes despite consistent lifestyle
Changes in libido or sexual function?
Common concern prompting medical consultation
Mood or cognitive changes?
Brain fog, irritability, or low mood
Do you have any of these conditions?
Medical contraindications that may affect eligibility
Have you had testosterone levels tested before?
Previous blood work can streamline assessment
What’s your main goal for seeking consultation?
Understanding your consultation priorities
The Physiology of Stabilisation
Why you might feel different in Month 2 compared to Week 1.
1. The “Honeymoon” Fade
In the first few weeks, you may have experienced a surge of energy as exogenous testosterone added to your remaining natural production. By weeks 6–8, your natural production (HPTA axis) suppresses, leaving you solely reliant on the medication. This is normal, but can cause a temporary dip in subjective well-being.
2. Steady State Saturation
It takes approximately 5 half-lives for a medication to reach “steady state” in the blood. For Testosterone Enanthate or Cypionate, this is roughly 5–7 weeks. Only after this point does blood work accurately reflect your long-term levels on a specific dose.
3. Receptor Upregulation
Androgen receptors take time to adjust to the new hormonal environment. While blood levels stabilise by week 8, the biological effects (muscle protein synthesis, fat oxidation, neurological changes) are just beginning to gain momentum.
Normal Adjustments vs. Issues to Watch
Distinguishing between transient adaptation symptoms and side effects requiring management.
The 10-Week Review Panel
This is arguably the most important blood test in your TRT journey. It dictates your long-term protocol.
🧪 Total & Free Testosterone
The Goal: To verify if your current dose puts you in the upper-physiological range (typically 20-30 nmol/L trough, depending on the individual).
Timing Matters: Bloods must be drawn at “Trough” (the morning of your injection, before you inject) to ensure we measure the lowest point. This prevents overdosing.
⚠️ Oestradiol (E2)
The Goal: To see how much testosterone is aromatising into oestrogen.
Context: Elevated E2 is not inherently bad; it protects joints, brain, and libido. We treat symptoms (spicy nipples, extreme bloating, emotional volatility), not just numbers. If E2 is high but you feel great, we typically do not intervene.
🩸 Haematocrit & Haemoglobin
The Goal: To ensure blood viscosity remains safe. TRT stimulates red blood cell production (Erythrocytosis).
The Fix: If Haematocrit exceeds 0.52-0.54, we may recommend therapeutic venesection (blood donation) or lowering the testosterone dose to reduce bone marrow stimulation.
🛡️ PSA & Liver Function
The Goal: Safety check.
Context: PSA may rise slightly due to prostate volume increase (benign), but velocity of change is monitored closely. Liver enzymes (ALT/AST) ensure your body is metabolising the carrier oil and hormones without stress.
Dialing In: Common Adjustments
Based on your 10-week review, your doctor may adjust your protocol in one of three ways.
If Trough levels are supra-physiological (>35 nmol/L) or side effects are unmanageable.
If levels are still sub-optimal (<15 nmol/L) and fatigue persists despite treatment.
Moving from 1x to 2x or 3x weekly injections to reduce hormonal peaks and control Oestradiol without blockers.
Your Month 3 Review Checklist
Ensure you are prepared for your stabilisation review to get the most out of your consultation.
Stabilisation Phase FAQs
Common questions patients ask during the 8-12 week mark.
Why did I feel better in Week 3 than I do in Week 8?
This is a common phenomenon. In Week 3, you had “stacked” testosterone: your remaining natural production PLUS the injected testosterone. By Week 8, your brain has sensed the high levels and shut down your natural production (HPTA axis), so you are running solely on the medication. This is the true baseline. We dial in the dose from here to bring you back up to optimal.
My nipples are sensitive. Do I need an Aromatase Inhibitor (AI)?
Not necessarily. Transient sensitivity is common as hormones fluctuate. We avoid AIs (Anastrozole) unless absolutely necessary because Oestradiol is cardio-protective and neuro-protective. Often, simply splitting your testosterone dose into more frequent injections (e.g., twice weekly instead of once) lowers the peak conversion to Oestrogen and resolves the issue without extra drugs.
Do I have to donate blood?
Only if your Haematocrit (HCT) rises above safe levels (typically >0.54). Adequate hydration (3-4L water daily) can often keep HCT in check. If it stays high, therapeutic venesection or a dose reduction is the safety protocol to prevent blood clotting risks.
When will I see the physical changes?
While libido and mood often improve by month 3, significant changes in muscle hypertrophy and body fat reduction typically accelerate from Month 3 to Month 6. The stabilisation phase sets the hormonal foundation for these physical changes to occur. Consistency is key.
Can I switch injection frequency now?
Yes, the Month 3 review is the perfect time to discuss this. If you are experiencing “rollercoaster” effects (feeling great for 3 days, then crashing for 4), moving to a twice-weekly injection schedule (e.g., Monday morning / Thursday evening) creates a much more stable blood serum level.
Secure Your Stabilisation Review
The 10-week mark is the most critical point for long-term success. Book your review to analyse your bloods, adjust your dosage, and ensure your safety markers are in range.
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