Guest guest Posted December 14, 2008 Report Share Posted December 14, 2008 I would guess with levels like that you are having salt cravings. Have you tried putting a little sea salt in water a couple times a day for a little help until you get your adrenals in line? ________________________________ From: ttwenties <ttwenties@...> Sent: Sunday, December 14, 2008 7:29:22 PM Subject: 2nd blood tests. Adrenal Fatigue? I have received the results of my 2nd blood exam, and would like to share these results with you and compare them to the 1st exam I did 2 months ago. 1st blood exams (October) LH 5.9 IU/L (1.5 - 9.3) FSH 4.3 IU/L (1.4 - 18.1) Estradiol 75.4 pmol/L (43 - 151) Progesterone 2.80 nmol/L (0.89 - 3.88) Prolactin 11.5 ug/L (2.1 - 17.7) Androstenedione 1.9 nmol/L (2.4 - 12.6) SHBG 18.5 nmol/L (in men 13 - 71) Total Testosterone 9.17 nmol/L (8.40 - 28.7) Free Testosterone 17.8 pmol/L (19.08 - 121.45) DHT 668 nmol/L (in men 250 - 990) TSH 4.31 mUI/L (0.35 - 5.50) Adiol-G 10.1 ng/mL (in men 1.0 - 23.6) 2nd blood exams (December) LH 4.9 IU/L (1.7 - 8.6) FSH 5.3 IU/L (1.5 - 12.4) Estradiol 31.52 pmol/L (28.00 - 156.00) Progesterone 0.96 nmol/L (0.70 - 4.30) Prolactin 15.06 ng/mL (4.60 - 21.40) Androstenedione 1.86 ng/mL (2.4 - 12.6) SHBG 25.5 nmol/L (in men 13-71) Total Testosterone 12.61 nmol/L (9.90 - 27.80) TSH 3.02 uIU/mL (0.27 - 4.20) Free T3 3.65 pg/mL (2.00 - 4.40) Free T4 1.49 ng/dL (0.93 - 1.70) DHEAS 6.34 umol/L (1.50 - 10.70) Cortisol 170.5 nmol/L (taken at 8 am, range is: 171.0 - 536) Explanation * The different ranges are because the tests were taken in different labs (also different countries). My testosterone is very low indeed, but I think my LH and FSH production isn't bad, so after the 1st blood test I've been looking into other possible causes. At first I thought I could be hypothyroidism, but Free T3 and Free T4 came back within range. But at this time, Cortisol test was asked for, and came back below range. My doctor didn't pay much attention because it touches borderline. So I did some reasearch and it turns out I might be suffering from Adrenal Insufficiency. My adrenal glands are exhausted and are not putting out enough Cortisol. Therefore, my body is not producing enough Androstenedione, per this pathway: http://www.drlam. com/pictures/ adrenal_pathway. gif <http://www.drlam. com/pictures/ adrenal_pathway. gif> With my level of Androstenedione, no wonder I have low Testosterone and low Estradiol. A lack in cortisol levels explains an underactive thyroid (my TSH is too high), low Testosterone levels due to low Androstenedione, and a host of many symptoms that I have (in the last year i've had a recurring infection, many alergies and seborrheic dermatitis episodes.) Since I've read Cortisol should be the priority in treating hormones, I'm hoping that by increasing Cortisol, the other hormones will fall into place, including the low Testosterone. (Note: It's also worth noticing that my level of Estradiol has fallen to half since the 1st blood test, and my Progesterone has fallen to 1/3. My Prolactin has risen 5 points, approaching the top level of the interval.) I'd value your opinions about all this. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 15, 2008 Report Share Posted December 15, 2008 I am having salt cravings! I've started buying peanut snacks during the afternoon at work, cause I can just feel my body asking me for it. Next week I'll do ACTH stimulation test, and the doctor told me we'll get the results in the same day. So the day after I'll be able to start Cortisol replacement. I'm crossing my fingers so that this will solve my Testosterone problems. During the last year I've had symptoms come and go, I suppose this is caused by the hormonal imbalance i've had, and the attempts of my body to try to adapt. > > I would guess with levels like that you are having salt cravings. Have you tried putting a little sea salt in water a couple times a day for a little help until you get your adrenals in line? > > > > > ________________________________ > From: ttwenties <ttwenties@...> > > Sent: Sunday, December 14, 2008 7:29:22 PM > Subject: 2nd blood tests. Adrenal Fatigue? > > > I have received the results of my 2nd blood exam, and would like to > share these results with you and compare them to the 1st exam I did 2 > months ago. > > 1st blood exams (October) > LH 5.9 IU/L (1.5 - 9.3) > FSH 4.3 IU/L (1.4 - 18.1) > Estradiol 75.4 pmol/L (43 - 151) > Progesterone 2.80 nmol/L (0.89 - 3.88) > Prolactin 11.5 ug/L (2.1 - 17.7) > Androstenedione 1.9 nmol/L (2.4 - 12.6) > SHBG 18.5 nmol/L (in men 13 - 71) > Total Testosterone 9.17 nmol/L (8.40 - 28.7) > Free Testosterone 17.8 pmol/L (19.08 - 121.45) > DHT 668 nmol/L (in men 250 - 990) > TSH 4.31 mUI/L (0.35 - 5.50) > Adiol-G 10.1 ng/mL (in men 1.0 - 23.6) > > 2nd blood exams (December) > LH 4.9 IU/L (1.7 - 8.6) > FSH 5.3 IU/L (1.5 - 12.4) > Estradiol 31.52 pmol/L (28.00 - 156.00) > Progesterone 0.96 nmol/L (0.70 - 4.30) > Prolactin 15.06 ng/mL (4.60 - 21.40) > Androstenedione 1.86 ng/mL (2.4 - 12.6) > SHBG 25.5 nmol/L (in men 13-71) > Total Testosterone 12.61 nmol/L (9.90 - 27.80) > TSH 3.02 uIU/mL (0.27 - 4.20) > Free T3 3.65 pg/mL (2.00 - 4.40) > Free T4 1.49 ng/dL (0.93 - 1.70) > DHEAS 6.34 umol/L (1.50 - 10.70) > Cortisol 170.5 nmol/L (taken at 8 am, range is: 171.0 - 536) > > Explanation > * The different ranges are because the tests were taken in different > labs (also different countries). > My testosterone is very low indeed, but I think my LH and FSH > production isn't bad, so after the 1st blood test I've been looking > into other possible causes. > At first I thought I could be hypothyroidism, but Free T3 and Free T4 > came back within range. > But at this time, Cortisol test was asked for, and came back below > range. My doctor didn't pay much attention because it touches > borderline. > So I did some reasearch and it turns out I might be suffering from > Adrenal Insufficiency. > > My adrenal glands are exhausted and are not putting out enough > Cortisol. Therefore, my body is not producing enough Androstenedione, > per this pathway: > http://www.drlam. com/pictures/ adrenal_pathway. gif > <http://www.drlam. com/pictures/ adrenal_pathway. gif> > With my level of Androstenedione, no wonder I have low Testosterone > and low Estradiol. > > A lack in cortisol levels explains an underactive thyroid (my TSH is > too high), low Testosterone levels due to low Androstenedione, and a > host of many symptoms that I have (in the last year i've had a > recurring infection, many alergies and seborrheic dermatitis episodes.) > Since I've read Cortisol should be the priority in treating > hormones, > I'm hoping that by increasing Cortisol, the other hormones will fall > into place, including the low Testosterone. > (Note: It's also worth noticing that my level of Estradiol has fallen > to half since the 1st blood test, and my Progesterone has fallen to > 1/3. My Prolactin has risen 5 points, approaching the top level of the > interval.) > > I'd value your opinions about all this. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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