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Started by FrancisAnn, July 12, 2015, 05:25:50 PM
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Quote from: FrancisAnn on July 15, 2015, 04:48:19 AMI'm sure looking forward to a nice pellet so I can relax & not have to deal with this pill/patch stuff any more. Luckily my electrolysis lady that I've used for 2 years uses pellets for her hormone/HRT. She will know the best doc in my area for that. My doc is OK but just a GP doc & will prescribe anything I need but I do not think he has any experience with actually doing pellet implants.
Quote from: kelly_aus on July 15, 2015, 05:47:25 PMAfter reading all the positive experiences people have had with implants, I felt the need to post my experience with them. Before I start, I will not blame the doctor for what happened, her professionalism is not in question.I had an implant after about a year on oral. It caused my E levels to drop back to 'acceptable' male ranges and all estrogen-based changes stopped, including breast development. My levels were so bad that after a couple of months my doctor put me back on an oral administration route. It's taken me 3 years and a change to patches to restart my breast development. Was it a bad implant? Unlikely, as my gyno had never had one from that implant supplier. Was it that I simply didn't react well to the implant? Possibly, but as I have no plans to try them again, I guess we'll never know.
Quote from: Laura_7 on July 15, 2015, 06:17:48 PMThere is no rule that only one implant should be used. Yet some endos seem to see it that way.If blood levels are too low dosage is upped with other forms of application as well.Transgender people are not menopausal cis people in this regard, for whom implants are used as well. They need different doses.hugs
Quote from: kelly_aus on July 15, 2015, 06:33:18 PMOther patients of hers, including one of the Admins here, have no problems with her implants, which I was told were nonstandard doses. Even the gyno was surprised by it's lack of efficacy. And I love how people here will always blame the doctors when something doesn't go quite right, whether it was deserved or not. In this case, the doctor cannot be blamed, as evidenced by her other patients. I believe that doctor uses similar implants herself - as a post-op.. My post was simply a warning that the implants may not be as great for everyone as some people here seem to think. If they've worked for you, great.. But there is a chance it won't work.
Quote from: Laura_7 on July 15, 2015, 06:41:00 PMWell there is for example the possibility of an encapsulation...but there are ways to work around that... and for example using a few smaller ones instead of one big one... for more surface...Well it was not meant to blame but to look for a solution...hugs
Quote from: kelly_aus on July 15, 2015, 07:29:45 PMYou don't think this was discussed and the possibility of encapsulation explored? Imaging revealed no encapsulation. For whatever reason, implants were not the solution for me, despite the fact they worked just fine in many of her other patients. Dose wasn't an issue - it was the same as her many of her other patients. You know what? This is the last time I share any of my personal experiences here. Because they sometimes fall outside of the 'groupthink' realm of reality, either I get treated like an idiot or my medical professionals are made to seem questionable. The gyno in question is not incompetent, far from it.. And as a trans woman herself, I suspect she might have even paid a little more attention to what she was doing.