Your doctor has
prescribed testosterone replacement therapy in the form of an injectable.
One of the biggest reasons women are
prescribed testosterone replacement therapy is to boost sex drive.
Not exact matches
Testosterone -
replacement therapy (
prescribed in the form of a cream or gel patch applied to the skin, or given as a pill or injection) can be effective.
It is physically impossible to use
testosterone replacement therapy for bodybuilding purposes, as a shortcut of sorts — the amounts
prescribed are simply too low.
Even though initially HGH therapy was only
prescribed for males, and often in tandem with TRT (
testosterone replacement therapy), hormonal
replacement doctors have confirmed that HGH injections for women can supply them with similarly revitalizing benefits.
If you're on
testosterone replacement therapy, you're being
prescribed testosterone because your body isn't producing
testosterone as it should be — you're not using it for cosmetic reasons or as a shortcut to muscle growth.
Testosterone replacement therapy → Correctly prescribed testosterone injections → Elimination of issues and problems → Feelings of strength, better health and great
Testosterone replacement therapy → Correctly
prescribed testosterone injections → Elimination of issues and problems → Feelings of strength, better health and great
testosterone injections → Elimination of issues and problems → Feelings of strength, better health and great contentment
On the other side of the spectrum, however, too many physicians are too quick to
prescribe (and too many young patients are too quick to request)
testosterone supplementation or
replacement too soon.
They will have seen their doctors, and because laboratory tests usually continue to be normal at this time, no focus is placed on the adrenal glands, no focus is placed on the stress, and more stimulants are added in terms of hormone
replacement; thyroid medication,
testosterone, and the like are
prescribed.
This is the gentle
replacement of the
testosterone hormone with a cream that is
prescribed by a licensed doctor.
It is essential that an experienced hormone
replacement therapy specialist
prescribe testosterone enanthate for use to ensure the proper dosage and treatment while reducing the risk of potential side effects.
Postmenopausal women using BHRT (or HRT) typically take their
replacement hormones once or twice daily, as do men using BHRT (fortunately for 21st century men, the formerly patented, carciogenic
testosterone analogue, methyltestosterone — widely and enthusiastically
prescribed for men in the 1940s and early 1950s, as was Premarin ® for women from the 1980s until 2002 — is hardly every
prescribed at present).