StoptheMadness said:
7/9/2011 blood test (3 months post finasteride)
LH 4.1
FSH 1.6
testosterone 856 (249-836 ng/dL)
free t, direct 13.0 (8.7-25.1 pg/mL)
SHBG 77.5 (14.5-48.4 nmol/L)
estradiol 37.0 (7.6-42.6 pg/mL)
estrone 45 (12-72 pg/mL)
letter from my endo dated july 2011
It would probably be worth having liver function tests done to be sure the high SHBG is not one manifestation of a more general problem with hyperglobulinemia due to hepatitis or chronic liver disease, but that explanation for the high SHBG seems highly unlikely. My previous speculation, that high estrogens might have explained the elevation of SHBG, was not supported by the current studies. There may be a relatively long timeframe for changes to be seen in the levels of circulation globulins, after revision of any influence that had been formerly exerting an effect upon their levels. A possibility is that we still could be seeing lingering effects from estrogen elevations of the past; the present estradiol level is in the high end of the normal range. However, given that estrogen elevation is not a recognized complication of treatment with Propecia, I now think the likeliest explanation might be that SHBG levels could be affected by the ratio of dihydrotestosterone to estrogen, such that a low ratio induces SHBG levels to be elevated. Once SHBG is elevated, the total testosterone is elevated, but not the free testosterone. With the passage of time, if there has been a temporary effect of this type, the effect should regress. Although I have tried to research these questions, I'm not finding clearcut answers. If I hear from you with your permission, I might like to share the de-identified data with an expert in the field of andrology or sex steroid metabolism. If you should learn anything further from your contacts who have similar concern, I would be interested to hear of your findings. (she means the hairloss community).
ummmm WHAT?
Erroneous in its entirely. It's showcased in Merck's study. Given gyno is a known complication this should be obvious tbh. The link for this is in another thread: Enden should help you on this one.
That said, your endo seems very open and useful and indeed quite insightful given this is a rather unusual problem. Kudos.
My best advice though, is:
1) She doesn't even know your DHT. That could explain a high SHBG reading (low DHT). SHBG and DHT balance against each other. I'd love to see how you respond to small amounts of proviron. That said, id recommend needle root extract at this juncture.
2) She's looking at your key sex hormones only. She would be well advised to expland things to include your thyroids (TSH, Free T3, Free T4, Reverse T3) and adrenals (progesterone, cortisol readings, aldosterone etc). The elevated SHBG could very well be a red herring and not the key problem.
3) Going back to what you guys are looking into. If you haven't already did a full Liver function test that would be a good idea. A liver detox could help your SHBG level as should a good break from alcohol (a top Professor told me to stop alcohol for 6 weeks and retest my SHBG when it was high).
Hope this helps.
EDIT- Man i really wish i had an endo like yours. The sad thing is though, it's a crazy amount of trial and error and this problem - atleast for many of us - it far from straight forward. It will demand alot of time and effort. After a few failed attempts i can imagine that many endos - even good one's like this - could lose patience with the whole thing. Let's hope you guys nail it early on. I'd be very happy to help you avoid wasting time on silly stuff and cut straight to the useful stuff to avoid chasing the wind.