You get way less rollercoaster with shots than pellets for sure.
Really? For me and everyone else I know that's on TRT it's the complete opposite. I switched over from shots to pellets and for me pellets are 1000x better than shots.
Really? For me and everyone else I know that's on TRT it's the complete opposite. I switched over from shots to pellets and for me pellets are 1000x better than shots.
Wife did the pellets for a couple years and had big ups and down just after and just before time for new pellets.
I spent a year under my GP and had ups and downs even with injections, when I switched to a specialist he took the same small dose my GP prescribed and divided it into 2 shots per week instead of one and it was a life changer. Wife then changed to injections and found the same.
Wife did the pellets for a couple years and had big ups and down just after and just before time for new pellets.
I spent a year under my GP and had ups and downs even with injections, when I switched to a specialist he took the same small dose my GP prescribed and divided it into 2 shots per week instead of one and it was a life changer. Wife then changed to injections and found the same.
I've tried it twice...both times for a few months at a time. Neither time did I see any side effects or benefits. It literally changed nothing for me. My doctor said if I don't see any benefit then there is no need to do it.
I think it affects different people in different ways.
I did pellets for maybe four years. then got prostate cancer. Treatment for that is to kill all testostorne. So went from 700+ to 0.
Almost a year past treatment and testostorne is coming back. Can not restart the testostorne pellets or shots for at least another year and will have to evaluate it then.
If you are doing the T-treatments your doc should also be checking your PSA levels. Don't believe there is a proven correlation; its just good practice to know your numbers.
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