> You're right though to point out that the body loves homeostasis and will downregulate endogenous testosterone production if serum levels are high from supplementation.
Any supplementation will, by definition, raise serum levels higher than they were before the extra testosterone was added.
This is what causes the downregulation, so of course it will happen. Like I said, people like to be in denial about this because it doesn’t necessarily happen right away, but it happens.
> True, but not all of the permanent effects are negative.
That’s a weird way of looking at it. Those extra muscle nuclei won’t be of much use if you discontinue TRT and your endogenous system is too atrophied to keep up with basic bodily needs. You have to look at the big picture.
Your comment is a good example of the denial I was talking about: For whatever reason, some people don’t want to believe that the negative effects will happen to them, and they want to ignore the consequences or change the subject to only talk about the positives.
Any supplementation will, by definition, raise serum levels higher than they were before the extra testosterone was added.
This is what causes the downregulation, so of course it will happen. Like I said, people like to be in denial about this because it doesn’t necessarily happen right away, but it happens.
> True, but not all of the permanent effects are negative.
That’s a weird way of looking at it. Those extra muscle nuclei won’t be of much use if you discontinue TRT and your endogenous system is too atrophied to keep up with basic bodily needs. You have to look at the big picture.
Your comment is a good example of the denial I was talking about: For whatever reason, some people don’t want to believe that the negative effects will happen to them, and they want to ignore the consequences or change the subject to only talk about the positives.