Hi Michael - thanks for the explanations. I have some follow-up questions...Thanks for your patience.....(I am VERY detail-oriented..with a side dose of OCD)...I understand if I have reached my limit of your time, but if not....thank you.

This is very interesting. My understanding of conversion is that it occurs when a spike is too high for the body's level. Therefore, if applied a couple of times a day at a much lower level than 1 per week shots, you wouldn't have as high of a peak. Are you saying that anytime T peaks, no matter how high the peak is, it converts to aromatase?
I dont think its possible for gels to beat injections on aromatase even with twice daily applications, there is still a small spike each time you apply the gel followed by a bit of a decline.
I cant find it now but if you were to look at a graph of the natural rythem of testosterone it goes up and down every 30 mins, with it being higher around 6am-10am then a decline and a slight jump at around 1pm, and lower in the afternoon and night.
My theory based on what I have read and heard:
The body is extremely complex, it senses when a hormone needs to be increased or decreased and it does it quick, so any exogenous testosterone is gonna aromatase more then endigenous testosterone, because at one time or another its gonna be too much, or another theory is that the body isnt prepared, it never sent out the signal so it aromatases it to estrogen, I am not sure if anyone at all knows the correct answer to this yet, these are just theories, if you were to ask a doctor, one doctor will tell you one thing and the other doctor will tell you something diffrent, until I come across proof of the mechanism for aromatase then I will leave these as theories.
Keep in mind Arimidex is a last resort to control E2, you usually want to try let your body do it naturaly by methods such as changing testosterone methods, losing bodyfat, and using natural suppliments.
E2 above 30pg/ml would mean needing arimidex.
Protocols I have come across look like this:
.25mg arimidex If Needed.
D1 100mg Test cyp/enth
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6 250IU HCG
D7 250IU HCG
.5mg Arimidex every 2nd day was the dose for this 1 person who personally uses this protocol
D1 40mg Test cyp/enth (Although PROP would be ideal)
D2 200IU HCG
D3 200IU HCG
D4 40MG Test cyp/enth (Although PROP would be ideal)
D5 200IU HCG
D6 200IU HCG
D7 40mg Test cyp/enth (Although PROP would be ideal)
D8 40mg Test cyp/enth (Although PROP would be ideal)
D9 200IU HCG
D10 200IU HCG
D11 40MG Test cyp/enth (Although PROP would be ideal)
D12 200IU HCG
D13 200IU HCG
D14 40mg Test cyp/enth (Although PROP would be ideal)
D15 200IU HCG
etc
D1 androgel +250iu HCG
D2 androgel
D3 androgel +250iu HCG
D4 androgel
D5 androgel +250IU HCG
D6 androgel
D7 androgel
because HCG also raises testosterone it contributes to aromatase. It isnt used every day and it isnt used on the same day as injections.
When using injections more frequently you are providing smoother T levels therefore less aromatase, the downside to TRT is the conversation to E2, E2 is to blame for most the side effects of poorly administered TRT.
I have read different studies about the surface area of the skin to use. I have been rubbing my gel into a very small area because I thought that would help prevent aromatase/reductase conversion.
Thank you for this. I wonder when something is considered a gel vs a cream....how much alcohol it would need to have to be a gel and if that would make a difference as to what areas and how much surface area to apply to?
So...it sounds like you are saying that the vehicle that is applied the least frequently is the least aromatasing. My understanding was that which was applied the most frequently was least aromatasing. I thought that was one reason that it is recommended to do shots every 3 or 7 days versus every 10 to 14.
The reason pellets are rarely done is because its a surgical procedure and also, from what I have been told by an endocrinologist(keep in mind endos dont have much credibility when it comes to TRT) it doesnt allow the receptors to ever desensitize, because its just such a constant level, although I havent heard any other doctors or literiture confirming this, so for now its just a theory.
You get prescribed gels 1st because its better to try simulate natural T rythem and be fortunate enough to be able to keep E2 in range, rather then have a weekly T rythem to haveto keep E2 in control.
This info isnt directly from Dr. John, but a lot of it is based on what he teaches and the rest is from what I have consistantly come across from multiple sources including google, medical literiture and speaking to other people on TRT and doctors.
Even 2 of the best doctors in TRT cant agree on each other with some things (Dr. John and Dr. Shippen) re: SubQ(below the skin and not into the muscle injections).
As I am sometimes particular about how I word things, I am sure your particular on reading and that you would understand, but for others reading this I hope some people dont misunderstand my posting, when I say something is a theory I mean it, and when I say "based on" doesnt mean he neccasarily will agree on it.
If you really want to go about things the right way, you shouldnt be looking for a doctor who is willing to do pellets, but rather a doctor who is willing to work with Dr. John, btw for some reason he does not recommend pellets, not sure why though.
Every common form of TRT is bioidentical testosterone, rarely compound creams may not be, and methyltestosterone is what you need to stay away from.
Okay...I am a bit confused. I thought the gels were great if E2 and DHT weren't an issue, but that injections might be good if they were an issue...
I assume it should go like this:
As soon as you start TRT you take Arimidex-preventative measures, meaning you start Zinc, Indoplex DIM if your pre TRT E2 levels are on the highish size, etc.
androgel ----- E2 a problem, goto injections
--------E2 not a problem, start HCG
injections-----------E2 still a problem, goto pellets, increase frequency or start arimidex(at lowest dosage, most likely .25mg E3D?)
E2 not a problem, start HCG
HCG-------E2 a problem change protocol, androgel to injections, injections to pellets or add arimidex, or if you feel HCG is doing nothing for you, you could(or shouldnt?) stop it(dont know Dr. Johns view on this.)
Dont know but I havent heard much of them for a reason, mostly probly for the same reason Andriol isnt available in the US, because it would be a poor choice.
I have read about him before...thanks for the reminder. Have you met with him?
My mistake...I checked the bottle...I was taking I3C 400mg. 2 - 3 3x per day.
Saw palmetto hasnt been shown to stop hairloss if its gonna happen.
Personally, if I was you I would switch to injections for the time being before seeing Dr. John or Dr. Shippen.
What have you read thats diffrent to Shippen? maybe the Androgel application? Preference of injections and protocols? He uses some diffrent methods to Dr. John, but both of them are years ahead of endos and GPs.
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