So, I had my first appointment to get on testosterone yesterday. (Well really my *second first appointment, but thats a long story)
The Doctor said I'm a great candidate for HRT and approved me moving forward. YAY!
So he said my bloodwork showed my estrogen level at 120, and my testosterone at 8. Apparently, thats actually sort of low for T in a female my age.
What I'm wondering about is the letters you see after the numbers say, when you google "normal amounts of E/T". ng/dl is nanograms per decaliter and seems to be how they measure T. pg/ml is picograms per millimeter and seems to be how they measure T. So, are my levels supposed to be said that way? Like, is my T 8ng/dl and my E 120 pg/ml. Why is there a difference and how can you actually compare the two, if they are using different measurements? 120 vs 8 seems like a huge difference, but it may not be, since they're different units of measure.
Please help me, I want to understand the actual changes I'm going to be making to my body and this seems essential!
-Bear