Endogenous hormonePrescription therapy existsRequires monitoring
Testosterone is the primary male sex hormone (also important in women) that influences muscle, bone, libido, mood, and energy. It can be measured and, where clinically appropriate, optimized under a provider.
Testosterone is an androgen produced mainly in the testes (and in smaller amounts by the ovaries and adrenal glands). It supports muscle and bone, red-blood-cell production, libido, mood, and energy. Levels decline gradually with age and are affected by sleep, body composition, stress, and illness.
Testosterone is measured by blood test — typically total and free testosterone, often alongside SHBG, LH, FSH, estradiol, and a metabolic panel. Timing matters (morning draw), and one value is interpreted in clinical context, not in isolation.
When labs and symptoms indicate, testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) is an established, FDA-approved option for diagnosed hypogonadism — but it is a medical decision that requires evaluation, monitoring, and a discussion of risks and goals (including fertility). Optimization always starts with sleep, body composition, and the inputs above.
Anyone with symptoms of low testosterone or interest in optimization should be evaluated by a licensed provider who can order and interpret labs, weigh risks and goals, and monitor therapy over time.
Reference ranges vary by lab and age; interpretation depends on symptoms and the full hormonal picture, not a single number.
TRT is established for diagnosed deficiency but carries real considerations (fertility suppression, monitoring needs). It's a medical decision made with a provider.
Sleep, losing excess body fat, resistance training, and stress management can meaningfully support healthy levels.
If you'd like help applying this information to your own health, schedule a consultation with the Bearing team.
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