I had labs drawn on the 15th of last month and never heard from doctor so I went by today to get a copy of the lab results because I want to know what's going on and I take an active part in my health care.
I was able to look up anything on google pretty easily that I didn't already know except there were two different estrogen test which I'm not sure how to interpret.
Estrogens, Fractionated LC/MS/MS
Esterone LC/MS/MS 507 pg/mL
Estrodiol Ultrasensitive 131 pg/mL
Other than that, the things that were flagged as abnormal were for the most part normal for a female.
red blood cell count 4.17
prolactin 19.3 ng/mL
total testosterone less than 20 ng/dL
I think you mean "estrone (E1) and estradiol (E2)" ;).
These are 2 of the 3 natural occurring forms of estrogen found in the human body (estrone E1, estradiol E2, and estriol E3). I've never had my estrone E1 level tested... only my estradiol E2 level, as that's the most potent and most of interest for us. Most docs shoot for an E2 level somewhere between 110-160 pg/mL... so you're right where you should be.
;D
Your total T-level is in a good place as well.
Following up a bit more on the good info the previous poster provided...
While with Testosterone you can just say Testosterone and be pretty clear you mean Testosterone.
Testosterone and Estrogen are somewhat misleading to compare.
Testosterone as you probably know is an Androgen, Androgens and Estrogens being the class of chemical compounds that induce development of male or female characteristics respectively.
Males have a relatively simple endocrinological (sp?) system compared to women. Testosterone being the primary sex steroid.
Women on the other hand have 3, of which Estradiol is the most analogous to Testosterone. So it's the one you want to be looking at.
From memory, I would probably want Estradiol to be a little higher than that, but this depends on if I'm thinking of the same units of volume, so you may want to look it up yourself on the blood references available on the internet.
For interests sake, Estrone is the estrogen most commonly associated for menopausal years. As far as I know the only common HRT supplement that works using Estrone (and various other non-human estrogens) is Premarin.
Estriol is the Pregnancy hormone, I'm not aware of anyone taking it for TS HRT reasons.
Sometime you may want to do if you can is ensure that when the doctor makes up the pathology request, or equivalent in your country, that they mark you as female for the labs.
With most health care systems they don't care about the different sex selection in terms of billing, but it will mean the pathology labs working up your info will use the female reference ranges on the report instead of male. Makes for a simpler read.
Hope some of that helps!