Cindy,
I am just posting the following for informational purposes so people can be better informed when they go see their doctors. This will allow them to best decide if the doctor who is treating them is indeed competent, it's a safeguard against possible malpractice or incompetency. Doctors are human after all and some may not always make the best decisions. I urge others to also do their own research, talk to as many experts as possible, and remain critical at all times of all information they are exposed to, including in HERE and my information. I believe the following is useful and important though as it can serve to initiate a positive discussion with the doctor who is prescribing these medications and encourage the person to seek the opinions of other experts as well.
Thank you.

and best of luck!
Quote from: PrincessLulu on March 28, 2016, 07:42:36 PM
my hrt dosage so far.
endocrinologist has me on premarin and finasteride.
Premarin is an estrogen which increases health risks to a greater degree than bio-identical estrogen while both estrogens are just as effective for feminization and breast growth. It makes no sense to take Premarin as you are unnecessarily increasing harm to your body.
Finasteride has been associated with bouts of depression/anxiety in some people even after discontinuation and reduces very important neurosteroids that affect learning, memory and mood.
I would have a talk with your doctor and ask to perhaps be switched to bio-identical estrogen (17-beta estradiol or estradiol valerate) and perhaps drop finasteride and take another potent anti-androgen if estrogen alone is not enough for decent feminization. In the end, they decide and as Cindy stated, if you feel they aren't right, get a second opinion.

Quote from: Dena on March 28, 2016, 08:28:39 PM
Dosages are not the best way to determine if your levels for HRT are correct. You should receive blood test at the 3 month mark and your E and T levels should be checked
I disagree, especially on Premarin as it contains horse (equine) estrogens that affect the body and cannot be measured by tests. There is no ideal level of E for everyone and besides, levels fluctuate over time so tests only reveal one given point in time. Same with T, some need less, some are ok with a little more. In my opinion, solely relying on how your body is responding to HRT is enough to tell you if it's working as planned. In the end, your doctor decides based on their own protocols.
Quote from: Richenda on March 28, 2016, 11:59:13 PM
Finasteride or Dutasteride in conjunction with oestrogen will do the job perfectly satisfactorily.
It DEPENDS on many things. Not always.
QuoteI would also personally avoid spiro as it's not intended for the purpose of transitioning and I think it's also a dangerous drug.
If you take the necessary precautions, drinking enough water and eating enough salt, you should normally be fine. Also limit high potassium stuff.
QuoteThe other route to go down is GNrH analogues about which others know way more than me. It's those which the NHS prescribe. My T levels have vanished without any recourse to them but it may be something I consider for the sake of my liver.
There have been no studies showing bio-identical estradiol to cause liver problems. Premarin and other non-bio-identical estrogens may however cause problems in high doses or even perhaps, lower doses.
QuoteAll these drugs are toxic to our bodies.
Toxic is a strong word. It depends. Estradiol and progesterone are the same hormones half the world population produce for decades, sometimes in very high amounts during pregnancy so I wouldn't call these drugs toxic. Spironolactone seems quite safe. Some other drugs and non bio-identical estrogens pose higher risks, but toxic is a strong word!
Quote from: Richenda on March 29, 2016, 12:43:35 AM
Aside from liver toxicity there's increased DVT risk as well as cancer risks.
To be fair, in the large WHI study of 2003, Premarin was actually associated with a decrease in breast cancer incidence. Also a decrease in colon cancer. The addition of another hormone was associated with cancer.
Quote from: AnonyMs on March 29, 2016, 03:15:00 AM
I'm pretty sure Estradiol in humans and Estradiol in horses is not the same chemical
Premarin is a mix of hormones from horse estrogen (equilin) to estrone (predominant one), similar to what is found in humans so that you have naturally occurring estrogens in humans and others which only occur in horses.