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| Men's Health Forum: This is a discussion on HCG Only Protocol and Secondary Hypogonadism within the Anabolic Steroids forums, part of the extensive steroid information at MESO-Rx; I've got secondary hypogonadism. Fertility is still a concern of mine. Is an hCG only protocol a good option in ... |
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I've got secondary hypogonadism. Fertility is still a concern of mine. Is an hCG only protocol a good option in my case? I'm looking for people who've had experience with hCG only protocol that could share their experience. Is hCG more expensive than, say Test? What does a typical hCG only protocol look like? |
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I can't speak to the first part of your question, but I can help on the price question. This is assuming your insurance doesn't pay for anything. Going by prices from the pharmacy that Swale uses, generic hcg is $46 for 10,000 IU, which is a lot of hcg, but you can only keep it for 60 days once its reconstituted and then you have to throw it out. So, you'd be looking at $23 a month no matter how much you use. Test cyp is $110 for 10ml of 200mg/ml. So at 100mg a week, you'd have enough for 20 injections or about 5 months, or $22 a month. Now this pharmacy does not necessarily charge the going rate, I'm just using them as an example. You can probably get the meds cheaper if you shop around.
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I disagree with much of what Dr. Shippen has said about using HCG. He still uses too much, to start with. And he tries to arbitrarily assign dosages based upon some sort of percentage yield of T production. The problem with that is he doses the HCG QOD. Therefore blood androgen levels are constantly going up and down, also affected by widely varying LH production, AND inherent innaccuracies in lab testing. You just cannot arrive at hard-and-fast rules given all those confounders. I spent about an hour with Dr. Shippen a year ago December. He's a really good guy, and I like him very much. However, he always is trying to convince other doctors that he has all these new, secret protocols, and tries to get you to pay to go to one of his seminars to discuss them. That did not impress me very much. His introduction of Deprenyl is quite interesting, I must say. Just yesterday one of his patients emailed me with some questions. I was kind of surprised at what this particular patient's regimen is. He is to be respected as a true pioneer in TRT medicine, though. |
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If a weekly HCG dosage of about 1,000 to 1,500 IU gets your T into the upper normal range, you probably don't need to add exogenous T. If that dosage is not enough, then adding T would probably be a good idea. Quote:
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David: Do you have any problems with insomnia as a result of taking HCG at night? I notice that on the days I take it, I feel like I drank jet fuel for breakfast. It really makes me feel alert/awake/wired up...but in a good way...not like revved up on caffeine. On HCG, I have to work a bit at winding down at night. This was not the cause pre-HCG (when I was on Test Cyp only). Sonny |
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I think the circadian rythm is much over-rated. Most of my guys take their HCG in the morning, and enjoy its subjective benefits all day long. Response to HCG will not mimic the circadian rythm, anyway. That is why it can be taken QOD.
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When a man is "responsive" to HCG, the response occurs in 2 ways - the testicles and the h/p axis. Medline article 4044781 documents HCG's "self-priming" effect on the h/p axis. This article indicates that an initial peak in T occurs 2 to 8 hours after an HCG shot and a second peak in T occurs 48 to 72 hours after the shot. The second peak is caused by LH production. In other words, HCG primes the pump (the h/p axis). Quote:
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Last edited by DavidZ; 03-26-2005 at 11:26 AM. |
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I dont see how hCG can stimulate GRH, leading to LH production? Can you please show us how this happens? Or does it stimulate the HP directly? David I only see the abstract on the net, if you have it, can you post it to this board entirely, I would like to look at it more closely. I wonder if this had to do with its pharmokinetics. Swale, what are your thoughts to that study? David here is something else that I found: Prolonged biphasic response of plasma testosterone to single intramuscular injections of human chorionic gonadotropin. Padron RS, Wischusen J, Hudson B, Burger HG, de Kretser DM. The response of plasma testosterone to varying doses of hCG (0--6000 IU) given as a single im injection has been evaluated in normal men. After an initial rise at 2 h, the levels of testosterone demonstrated a secondary rise, reaching a peak 48 h after the im injection. The magnitude of the response varied directly with the dose of hCG used, and at the highest dose (6000 IU) testosterone levels were still elevated 6 days after administration. Plasma estradiol levels showed a dose-dependent rise, with peak levels being attained 24 h after hCG. The prolonged response of plasma testosterone to a single injection of hCG should prompt a reevaluation of diagnostic and therapeutic regimens using this agent. PMID: 7372789 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] AND Testicular responsiveness to a single hCG dose in patients with testicular feminization. Balducci R, Adamo MV, Mangiantini A, Municchi G, Toscano V. Clinica Pediatrica 2nd University, La Sapienza, Rome, Italy. The suggestion that androgens may regulate testosterone (T) production in rat Leydig cells by a receptor-mediated feed-back mechanism, led us to investigate whether in vivo the absence of testicular androgen receptors, as it occurs in testicular feminization (TF), may modify the characteristic testicular response observed in men and prepubertal children after a single dose of hCG. Subjects consist of: 1) six normal men, 2) two adult patients with the complete form of androgen insensitivity syndrome (TF), 3) 12 normal prepubertal boys, 4) one prepubertal boy with the same form of TF. Each subject received i.m. a single dose of hCG 3500 IU/m2 b.s. and blood samples were collected basally and 2, 4, 24, 48, 72 and 96 hours after the hormonal stimulus. Serum levels of T, 17 alpha hydroxyprogesterone (17OHP) and 17 beta estradiol (E2) were measured at each collection time. In normal men a significant increase in T (M +/- SE) was observed at 4 h (758.6 +/- 135 ng/dl, P less than 0.05) and a more significant increase at 48 h (1082 +/- 60.3 ng/dl, P less than 0.001). E2 and 17OHP peaked significantly at 24 h (81.5 +/- 9.6 pg/ml and 460.7 +/- 90.9 ng/dl respectively). This response pattern is characteristic of the testicular desensitization which occurs in normal man after a single hCG dose. The same response pattern has been observed in the two TF adult patients suggesting that human testicular desensitization in vivo does not depend on androgen receptors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) PMID: 2793066 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] Last edited by DLMCBBB; 03-26-2005 at 02:22 PM. |
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