Testosterone for Women- The Most Important Webinar and Testosterone Study to Date
Testosterone for Women- The Most Important Webinar and Testosterone Study to Date by Neal Rouzier, MD April 2023 April’s webinar will be the last in the series of webinars addressing
Feel Good Hormones – Thyroid and Testosterone
by Neal Rouzier, MD Treatment Scenario Your 58 y/o hormone patient requests consultation with you over concerns of her HRT program. The patient notes her desire to stop the HRT
Testosterone for Women: Current AACE Guidelines vs What the Literature Says
Testosterone for Women: Current AACE Guidelines vs What the Literature Says by Neal Rouzier, MD In Testosterone for Women Part 1: The Evidence and Benefits No One Talks About, I
Testosterone for Men: Reduction in CVD, Prevention and Reversal of Diabetes, with the Resultant Reduction in CVD Mortality
Reduction in CVD, Prevention and Reversal of Diabetes, with the Resultant Reduction in CVD Mortality by Neal Rouzier, MD Testosterone for Men: Part 7 is a continuation of the articles
Testosterone for Men: Facts, Figures and Literature that you Should Know Before Prescribing Testosterone
Testosterone for Men: Facts, Figures and Literature that you Should Know Before Prescribing Testosterone by Neal Rouzier, MD The more articles that demonstrate the benefits of testosterone, the more there
Testosterone for Women: The Studies that Prove Testosterone is Absolutely Necessary for CVD Protection
Testosterone for Women: The Studies that Prove Testosterone is Absolutely Necessary for CVD Protection by Neal Rouzier, MD For the first several courses on Testosterone for Women, I addressed the
Treating T3 Deficiency (Part 6) Why T4 Thyroxine Therapy does not Improve Symptoms and Why TSH Suppression does NOT Result in Harm
Why T4 Thyroxine Therapy does not Improve Symptoms and Why TSH Suppression does NOT Result in Harm by Neal Rouzier, MD On Day 1 of the Part I BHRT Workshop
Testosterone for Women: The Levels Necessary to Achieve Symptom Improvement
In the first course, Testosterone for Women (Part I), I reviewed the current controversy in prescribing testosterone to women. In a separate consensus paper that is different from the one discussed in the first course, the authors recommend testosterone replacement based on symptoms and signs and not on serum levels. In fact, in this second consensus paper from “experts that have experience in the field of testosterone administration,” the authors stressed the importance of replacing testosterone to improve symptoms and not by being guided by numbers or levels. These authors specifically emphasized that testosterone should be supplemented based on symptoms and not just on serum levels alone, as testosterone levels do not correlate with symptoms as per much of the medical literature. The authors also suggested that testosterone should be dosed and adjusted based on symptom improvement, and not by testosterone levels. The authors reiterated that no number (or testosterone level) denotes a deficiency as symptoms denote a deficiency. Furthermore, improvement in symptoms do not correlate with numbers either as all women will respond differently and not based on any number. So, in contrast to men where the guidelines state that we must follow levels and numbers, these guidelines for women recommend that we do not test baseline levels nor treatment levels, rather symptoms should guide treatment initiation.
Testosterone for Women: The Evidence and Benefits No One Talks About
A 45 year old female presents to you complaining of fatigue, loss of energy, weight gain, muscle pain, and weakness in exercising.
She read about the benefit of hormones in treating her condition, but her PMD is against the use of hormones. Although she is open to taking hormones, her PMD scared her into thinking that testosterone is somehow harmful. You assure her that testosterone is not harmful and that many of her symptoms will improve on testosterone supplementation.
6 Important Qualities to Look For in Hormone Replacement Training
We have explored the pandemic of chronic illness that patients are experiencing. We have also explored how hormone replacement therapy can safely and effectively prevent or even treat many chronic illnesses by delving into the robust medical literature supporting hormone replacement. After learning how Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy (BHRT) can help patients fight chronic disease, providers may ultimately desire to add this form of medicine to their practice, so how do they go about doing that? The answer: training, of course.