Quote from: Melody on October 14, 2010, 12:04:13 AM
Well, today marks a week into my HRT and really haven't noticed much, either mental or physical. Maybe just slightly more tranquil. Not any more emotional than before. I guess I shouldn't be surprised since it is such a short period of time, but I suspect my E dose is not nearly enough to do much especially since I am not on any T suppressors. Sigh. I guess I will have to ride out the month until my new blood work shows the endo that things aren't really moving.
I'm just at about 60 days on both E + Spiro and have noticed no to little changes. No dramatic bursting into tears moments or anything like that. Nipple soreness and that's about it. Maybe slightly calmer, more mellow and laid back perhaps.
Quote from: pebbles on October 14, 2010, 09:34:41 AM
without T suppressors you won't get much effect as T counters E absorbsion. You have to take a huge dose of E to get any effects... It's why the FTMs don't take E blockers normally T dose it for them.
Exactly. I'm not sure why some docs prescribe MTF patients E w/o any sort of andro-blocker.
Quote from: Melody on October 14, 2010, 10:47:49 AM
I think what my Endo is initially trying to do is fool my pituitary into shutting down T production with my E dose. After 30 days I am to double my dose of E. Does that make sense?
I'm not so sure this is the reason. The pituitary gland doesn't produce testosterone. Testosterone is mostly produced by the testes and a small amount by the adrenal glands above the kidneys. The pituitary sends signals to other glands to start, stop, increase, decrease hormone production. This is why it's often called the master gland. It does produce hormones, just not testosterone.
Did you ask him specifically why he didn't prescribe Spiro or another andro blocker?
Quote from: Melody on October 14, 2010, 01:24:24 PM
My T level as tested a couple of weeks ago was 269. I understand that normal for a male is 200-900 or something like that. At first blush, 269 seems like low normal for a male, but without a good idea of the distribution along the 200-900 for males, I have no idea what my number means except to say that it isn't below normal. I will say that I have pretty androgynous features with a high pitched voice, gynecomastia, not much of an adam's apple and somewhat softer features than you normally see in a male. I am also only 5'6" tall. Maybe my endo took all of this into account too? Don't know, but I guess my blood test in three weeks will reveal all.
I have a very similar history. My T level was lower than yours pre-HRT. Low 200s (based on an average of 3 different tests over 60 days). My voice is also naturally on the high side and my voice is definitely the thing that helps me pass the most. No Adams Apple here either, and I had little body and facial hair to begin with. I'm 5'11", but my hands and feet are closer to a normal female size than a male size.
Here's a good chart showing the "normal range" of male testosterone levels:
http://www.mens-hormonal-health.com/normal-testosterone-levels.htmlAs you can see by looking at the last chart, anything below 500-600 ng/dl would be in the "below normal" range.
When I was looking for a doc/endo, some told me they like to start patients on E only (low dose) to see how they'll react. Like 25% of the usual max dosage. Others like to jump in somewhere in the middle with a higher dosage of E and Spiro, and some point later add Finasteride. At some point soon, your doc should prescribe Spiro to block the action of Testosterone. That's pretty much the usual course of treatment I found after speaking to several different endos and a SRS surgeon, all of which specialize in MTF patients.