Quote from: Robbyv213 on October 24, 2024, 08:56:34 AMAre we aloud to post what our prescriptions are and the doses that the doctors want us to take on here?
It is okay to post your lab results and what you are taking, but not the specific dose.
Yes, they will start you slowly because they have found that starting high can actually hurt development. So, there will be a slow increase over the first year.
Quote from: Robbyv213 on October 24, 2024, 08:56:34 AMthey're worried about over dosing.
You can not overdose on estrogen. Period.
Pregnant women have estradiol levels ten times their baseline levels. Some recorded over 1,000.
In my opinion, 100-200 is too low.
This is a long-standing argument I have had with my endocrinologists.
What they fail to realize is that we are trying to START PUBERTY regardless of our actual age.
Estrogen levels rise during puberty. The increase leads to secondary sex characteristics like breasts and changes in overall body composition (like curves)...
Too little estrogen can lead to a low sex drive. Too much of it can cause infertility and erectile dysfunction. Excessive estrogen can cause gynecomastia, or enlarged breasts...https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/body/22353-estrogenThe problem is that transgender medicine is new. All of the meds that are prescribed for us were designed for cis-women. As such, the cautions are to protect the uterus. When they were handing them out, I didn't get one. So I tell my doctors to stop worrying about anything below the waist. We are focused on BREAST DEVELOPMENT. And for that, we need estradiol levels over 200 and daily doses of progesterone. That is what causes breast development.
I argued with two endocrinologists, showed them the studies, and asked them where this danger was. Do pregnant women with extremely high levels of both estrogen and progesterone develop cancer, blood clots, and strokes? No, they do not. What happens to them (ignoring the uterus) during pregnancy? Their breasts enlarge and they gain weight in the butt and hips.
I finally got my Gynecologist to listen to me. I told her I was tired of baby-stepping my levels up to where they needed to be. Get my levels up over 200 - 300 and I will shut up. I am now on weekly injections and my levels come in right around 250. I am taking progesterone three times a day. Guess what happened? Breasts are growing! No cancer, no stroke, no blood clots. Biology 101.
That said, they are wise to start slow. They need to gauge how your body reacts to it. Slowly increasing over time is the right way to go. Yes, they will be chasing numbers, but your goal is 250 and not 100-200. For now, that is fine. Six months to a year from now, if all is going well, you will want to push those up to get puberty to kick in.
Don't get impatient, but don't wait four years to get it sorted either. When you hear people say breast development starts after six months of HRT. For some yes. For most, it is not the start of HRT. The changes start when you have a high enough level in your system so that things start happening. Maybe that is at 100 for you. For me, it is 250 and truly I would prefer to be closer to 400, but I can write my own prescriptions.

Why 400? Do an internet search for normal female estrogen levels and you will see that 350-400 is "normal". Pregnancy can push those numbers up to 20,000 but that is not common.
I hope this helps.