Barbell Shrugged - Physiology Friday: [Hormone Dysfunction] Birth Control, TRT, HRT, and Toxicity w/ Anders Varner, Doug Larson, Coach Travis Mash and Dan Garner Barbell Shrugged

Episode Date: September 13, 2024

In this Episode of Barbell Shrugged: How Birth Control can reduce testosterone by 70% Birth controls affects on your physique How to pick the right birth control What are drug induced nutrient deplet...ions  How to best handle menopause and andropause What happens when you do not have a cycle for 5+ years What is wrong with TRT and HRT How heavy metal and toxicity affect your hormones Connect with our guests: Anders Varner on Instagram Doug Larson on Instagram Coach Travis Mash on Instagram Dan Garner on Instagram

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Shrug family, this week on Barbell Shrug, we're digging into hormones, TRT specifically, HRT. This has to be one of the largest trends that is happening in the health and performance world right now. I feel like every single person that shows up with even minorly low testosterone or hormones off, instead of going and finding root cause issues of what's going on lots of doctors good or bad are starting to just offer up PRT as a solution without us having a better conversation about understanding root causes and why their testosterone or hormone imbalances may
Starting point is 00:00:42 be off in the first place that is what we're digging into today. So before you go and take the TRT that your doctor may or may not have prescribed, listen to this, dig into your blood work, kind of understand the framework of where and how we can find root cause issues that are leading to the imbalances. Let's go attack those.
Starting point is 00:01:00 And then once you start feeling better, your body's going to naturally get you to an optimal place once you have everything dialed in. It's a much better framework to work through. I think that it's going to have a much longer impact on your overall health and performance, longevity, and it's just a much healthier way many times for most people to go about getting to the place that they want to be. And always friends, make sure you get over to rapidhealthreport.com forward slash results. That is where our friend Timothy Jones has a case study that was found in Apple News and Men's Health.
Starting point is 00:01:34 Many of you have probably already seen it through those two resources. But if you have not, make sure you get over to rapidhealthreport.com forward slash results where you can read his story on how he cut his cholesterol in half and got completely shredded. You can access that free case study over at rapidhealthreport.com forward slash results. Friends, let's get into the show. Welcome to Barbell Shrugged. I'm Andrew Schmarner. Doug Larson. Dan Garner. Today on Barbell Shrugged, we are going to be talking about TRT. And is TRT right for you? When is it actually right for you? When isn't it right for you?
Starting point is 00:02:09 And all the questions you should be asking yourself before actually going on TRT. Dan, this is like one of the number one things that actually comes up in all of the, I shouldn't say all, but many of the calls that we have with people coming into Rapid is they've got this low energy thing. They've got a low libido thing. And then all of a sudden they go to the doctor. The doctor runs their test and it says, ah, you're at like low 400s, maybe 200s, maybe 300s. But it's somewhere below whatever is considered normal.
Starting point is 00:02:39 And then they get thrown on TRT. And the problem is a lot of times it doesn't end up solving the issues that they originally went into the doctor for. Yeah. Is there a right time or what should people be doing when they're talking to their doctors? Because this is obviously place number one, that it comes up and in their search for solving whatever these issues are. So let me kind of open up this podcast really with something I haven't said in a podcast before, because it'll probably alienate 80% of my audience. But when it comes to the way in which the body operates, I'm always like just something that constantly keeps coming up in my career and in my search for knowledge and wisdom
Starting point is 00:03:25 to help people become better versions of themselves is that lots of times we should be working with the body rather than against the body. And we just keep learning that every time we think we're smarter than biology, we're reminded that we're not. And I just just I don't think that this is a situation that is removed from that. So we have this this testosterone reference range of depending on what lab you're going with is typically from 300 to 900. It's quite assumed that when you're younger, you're going to have a higher testosterone. And as you get older, you are going to have a progressively lowered testosterone. Is that such a bad thing? Like, I think that honestly, that could actually be some form of adaptation that people aren't asking questions about yet, because I think less testosterone progressively and not pathologically over the course of time could actually serve to be an evolution into wise old man, as opposed to young bull, because you actually you become more patient, you become more compassionate, like these are things you actually want around when you're raising your kids, you're less likely to cheat on your spouse, you're you're less likely to likely to have the crazy competitive drive that men have to where we'll actually put ourselves in harm's way just to win a bet or win a conversation or something like that. And with compassion, with patience, with loyalty to your spouse, because
Starting point is 00:05:01 your sex drive is lowering with the fact that you're not going to put yourself in harm's way due to purely alpha male competitive drive. Like I'm not totally convinced that a progressively non pathologically lowered testosterone over time is that bad of a thing. Like, am I crazy here, guys? No, that's called 32 years old for me. I felt the day that that happened. I could tell you exactly where I was, where I was like, I don't really give a shit if I squat 500 pounds anymore. I think I have bigger things. Like, I'm supposed to get married right now and breed some little humans and live a much saner life. And I just happened to be 32. And then that exact second, I was like,
Starting point is 00:05:47 I'm going to go do different things. Now. I'm a different person all of a sudden. It's actually really interesting. Most people are not making a case for the benefits of lower testosterone. I rarely see that being done almost anywhere. But I have actually noticed that like, you know, I'm 39 now. And, you know, some at some point in the last like five years. But I have actually noticed that like, you know, I'm 39 now. And, you know, some at some point in the last like five years, like I have, I have noticed that like the percentage of the time that my mind is focused on sex has decreased. It used to be like 90 fucking percent. It was like all day long. I was just thinking about it all day long. And so at some point over the last five years, like certainly I think about it still quite frequently, but it's not what it was.
Starting point is 00:06:28 It's not it's not like all day long, all day, every day. And I had that conversation a while back with someone like like it's it's easier to remain faithful when I'm not like every time I see a female in any context. The first thing my mind jumps to is like I could mate with that thing. Like I could do this. Like when I was 25, it's like, they weren't even a person. It was just like, I could put something in that and that would feel good. And that would be good. And like, that was about as far as my mind wins. But now that I'm almost 40, um, it's, it's easier to be a dad and a husband when, when that's not the first thing on my mind. And so there, there, there is some benefit there, but at the same time, almost anyone that's coming to us to get help with energy or sex drive, they, they think something's wrong.
Starting point is 00:07:14 If you're going to get TRT, you feel like something's wrong. It's not, it's not like the normal decrease, like you're saying, um, you know, if you take it all the way to the end, as far as, as far as sex drive goes, like people have performance issues, like they, they just can't get an erection or like, there's just no mojo left. Like maybe their wife wants to have sex. And, and they're just like, I don't know, like, I just don't feel like it, which is like, would, would be a very weird thing to say. Like, I've never got, I've never gone that far where like, my wife wanted to have sex. And I was like, nah, nah, I don't want to do it but that happens to people and then if if that i presumably if that happened to me and or if i couldn't actually get an erection i'd be
Starting point is 00:07:50 like fuck i need some testosterone replacement therapy because this is not right and so like for those people you know is trt what they need to do like what what's the what's the landscape of of uh options in that case you don't have to just talk about sex but you know trt certainly you would think has some merit or wouldn't be as popular as it is it's like a it's like it's like a big thing right now when i was growing up like it was like steroids were bad and then all of a sudden there's trt clinics everywhere everywhere you go and all of a sudden steroids are awesome and they're like and they're like publicly they're like all of a sudden like totally accepted because it's not steroids it's trt yeah right so so so there's a bit there's a big landscape there like like filling the gaps for me for sure so like and i think um that's why i
Starting point is 00:08:36 said i think a few times in that explanation that i said non-pathological because if you like there is pathological um low testosterone there's also dysfunction and this and the outcome of the dysfunction is low testosterone so uh for example arsenic uh like is a certain heavy metal and it can actually bind to testosterone receptors and you can imagine a testosterone receptor like a like a parking lot space, arsenic will take that parking lot space so that testosterone cannot park there and exert testosterone action on the body. Like there's a big difference between hormone and hormone action. One is just something in circulation. The other is the thing in circulation is doing the thing that you want it to do. So arsenic can actually take up parking spots.
Starting point is 00:09:27 Another heavy metal is mercury. Mercury actually impacts an enzyme called 11-beta-hydroxylase. And this enzyme converts progesterone into cortisol. So 11-beta-hydroxylase converts progesterone to cortisol, but it doesn't have an accelerated rate. So it actually feeds that pathway. So we're going to have more cortisol than we otherwise would have. Cortisol runs antagonistic to testosterone.
Starting point is 00:09:54 So the very fact of having higher cortisol levels is going to result in lower testosterone levels purely due to the teeter totter antagonistic relationship that they have. So you have something like arsenic blocking receptor sites, you have something like mercury, accelerating enzymatic pathways to take resources away from testosterone. There are certain things like plastics and environmental pollutants that have been shown to accelerate estrogen pathways at the expense of testosterone. There's many things dietary and lifestyle related, such as stress, such as sleep, such as the amount and quality of fats coming in the diet. There are many things that can impact one's testosterone level.
Starting point is 00:10:39 And I suppose the point that I'm turning around to here is that those are true dysfunctions and low testosterone is basically the outcome of those dysfunctions. So then you do experience things such as fatigue and a loss of libido and the many other things that come with low testosterone. So those pathologies and dysfunctions absolutely can and should be addressed to improve overall systemic health. But the relentless pursuit of a thousand nanograms per deciliter of testosterone, I just don't think based on how the intelligence of our body, I don't think that that's necessarily
Starting point is 00:11:21 the pursuit everybody should be chasing. Because if you ask the average guy, like, hey, how dumb were you when you were 25? Well, how dumb were you when you were 20? They'd be like, Oh, dude, I was so stupid back then. Like, I didn't do the cause. It's not the cause. But I think that progressively lowered high testosterone mentality can sometimes allow you to get enter that type of wise old man state. And I think a point that I didn't mention is that it also allows you an opportunity to enter a state of willingness to be the mentor, as opposed to the one always having to be on the front lines grinding, you're actually thinking about the next generation, you're contributing
Starting point is 00:12:03 to them in ways where you're not actually after the credit. So I think that non pathological progressively reduced testosterone levels isn't necessarily a bad thing, provided you're not symptomatic. Shark family, I want to take a quick break. If you are enjoying today's conversation, I want to invite you to come over to rapidhealthreport.com. When you get to rapidhealthreport.com, you will see an area for you to opt in, in which you can see Dan Garner read through my lab work. Now, you know that we've been working at Rapid Health Optimization on programs for optimizing health.
Starting point is 00:12:39 Now, what does that actually mean? It means in three parts, we're going to be doing a ton of deep dive into your labs. That means the inside-out approach. So we're not going to be guessing your macros. We're not going to be guessing the total calories that you need. We're actually going to be doing all the work to uncover everything that you have going on inside you. Nutrition, supplementation, sleep. Then we're going to go through and analyze your lifestyle. Dr. Andy Galpin is going to build out a lifestyle protocol based on the severity of your concerns and then we're going to go through and analyze your lifestyle. Dr. Andy Galpin is going to build out a lifestyle protocol based on the severity of your concerns.
Starting point is 00:13:08 And then we're going to also build out all the programs that go into that based on the most severe things first. This truly is a world-class program, and we invite you to see step one of this process by going over to rapidhealthreport.com. You can see Dan reading my labs, the nutrition and supplementation that he has recommended that has radically shifted the way that I sleep, the energy that I have during the day, my total testosterone level, and just my ability to trust and have confidence in my health going forward. I really, really hope that you're able to go over to rapidhealthreport.com, watch the video of my labs and see what is possible. And if it is something that you are interested in, please schedule a call with me on that
Starting point is 00:13:51 page. Once again, it's rapidealthreport.com. And let's get back to the show. If you do struggle with erections, if you do struggle with a lot of fatigue, if you can't build muscle, that's a problem. I've had tons of clients, CEOs, athletes, whoever it's going to be in their 40s, 50s, 60s. I even had a guy in his 70s build muscle and drop body fat at the exact same time. The before and after was insane.
Starting point is 00:14:16 That's somebody who is functioning. So if you're symptomatic, 100%, we have to identify where your low testosterone is coming from and restore it to a normal level so that you're no longer symptomatic, 100%, we have to identify where your low testosterone is coming from and restore it to a normal level so that you're no longer symptomatic. But the the the hunt, the never ending hunt for like some sort of crazy number, for the sake of having a crazy number, I don't always think is a wise pursuit for long term health. Yeah. I think there's also like a psychological element to it. For people, it's almost like when, if you were to get to 12% body fat, you'd look in the mirror and go, well, I also need to be at eight now. And then you get to eight and you're like, well, why can't I get to five? Like, I still have this, like, I can grab skin and pull it out.
Starting point is 00:15:02 Like, I'm not completely emaciated. And like, it's like, dude, you're 12% body fat. What like, what does eight get you? And if someone's at like 400, they see 800 as like, well, that has to be where I'm low. I'm not even at like the 500 number, which is some some sort of like, average normal. Um, and then the psychological side of it kicks in. And I would imagine that's actually more detrimental because they start feeling like they're losing the game that doesn't even exist when it's really their body saying, this is where you're at. Let's just be as healthy as possible. And our testosterone levels will just land where they land instead of worrying about where you are
Starting point is 00:15:45 on this like scale of 200 to a thousand and hoping insurance is going to cover your uh your your new drug addiction i don't want to call it drug addiction but your new injectable decision making process like you gotta go to the clinic you're at 412 and you're like what uh okay yeah i'm low what my friends are gonna make fun of me it's like that doesn't Like you got to go to the clinic. You're at 412 and you're like, well, okay. Yeah. Hello. My friends are going to make fun of me. It's like, that doesn't, if you're, if you're healthy, your body's going to be where it's at. And, and those psychological games just get in the way of just making you feel worse than
Starting point is 00:16:17 you actually already, or than you actually really feel. Totally. And like that, that's why I like one, one big thing that I've said in my career is don't lose weight, get healthy. When you focus, when you put health at the forefront, those are the things that are actually going to make you feel better. Like to, to assume that it's all because of one hormone and that's going to change your life forever. That it's just, it's never going to happen. Just like magical supplement doesn't exist. A magical hormone doesn't exist. A magical anything doesn't exist, but you have to look
Starting point is 00:16:49 at health holistically as a whole. And when you look at it holistically and you see everything working in tandem together, um, there's such a thing known as efficiency too. Like, uh, there's, there's plenty of, I've had UFC fighters with testosterone in the four hundreds and you would think that what's like, shouldn't they be 900 or 1000 or something wild? No, because there is such a thing as efficiency. You can have anabolism, you can have protein synthesis, you can have all of the things that you want from testosterone at a lower level, if you're efficient with its conversion and utilization and free testosterone.
Starting point is 00:17:22 So if you're someone who actually has a testosterone of say 400 500 or something like that, but your sex hormone binding globulin is high, and is binding up a lot of that testosterone and you're not able to utilize it for its action within a cell, then you'll have symptoms of low testosterone. But if that testosterone binding that elevated sex hormone binding globulin was due to other hormonal factors, or perhaps low magnesium or low boron or low zinc, all of these things can drive up sex hormone binding globulin, you get rid of that, then testosterone can actually stay between like 400 500. But free testosterone goes up. And all of a sudden, here comes the libido, here comes muscle mass, here comes fat loss, here comes daily energy, all of these sudden, here comes the libido. Here comes muscle mass. Here comes fat loss.
Starting point is 00:18:06 Here comes daily energy. All of these things come back. So like looking at health holistically as a whole, sometimes you're chasing one rabbit and it's something completely different that you could actually have focused on. And I mean, even here at Rapid, when people come to us, I mean, how often do people have a symptom of fatigue? Oh, we're going to do a whole show, maybe a whole month. We have energy. Yeah. And there's so, and that's, that's my point. It's like, once I'm McMahon, I'm fatigued, maybe I should go on TRT. It's like, that's a enormous assumption.
Starting point is 00:18:39 That's a big jump. It's a leap. It's a huge leap. Like you're like you're not considering all the other factors associated with fatigue that we'll get that we can get into for a month like there are lifestyle factors there's environmental factors there's biochemical factors there's genetic factors there's so many things that will contribute to something that we're categorizing umbrella categorizing as fatigue and then also assuming it's testosterone now when yeah go ahead nope finish cool so with all of this said in no way shape or form am i against trt that's like the big message i want to get across because somebody might listen to this so far and be like this dude wants low testosterone he said something about being a wise old man and now he's talking about health like what what's garner on about didn't he just
Starting point is 00:19:29 bench 405 i thought this dude cared about us so can you get into a thousand is that possible yeah i hear words coming out of your mouth but i'd like a thousand yeah exactly so i i'm not against the rt um at all when it's required. That's the thing. I feel like testosterone has really gotten, has become like the catch-all for everything. And I don't talk to all of the people in the world, obviously, that are on TRT,
Starting point is 00:19:59 but most of the people that are coming to us that are already on it suffer from the exact same symptoms that they had before they went on TRT and then thought TRT was going to solve all of those problems. And it turns out it had nothing really to do with the actual testosterone levels or something was going on inside their body that was just hindering the, the energy levels or the libido or whatever, whatever was the symptom of that. And whether it was their doctor, whether they went in specifically asking, maybe they went to a clinic, which imagine that the clinic is like very good at giving you the thing that they sell. Um, but most people think that testosterone is going to like solve all of the problems and it solves
Starting point is 00:20:46 the problem of putting more testosterone into your body, but it doesn't really solve all the energy problems. It doesn't solve the libido problems. That stuff has to come from a different place. Um, what if you were to go actually need TRT, like you're in the 200s and it's not what what is testosterone trt actually going to solve when you go to i mean it's obviously going to raise your um your levels but like if it's not if for the people that we're working with specifically if it's not solving their energy issues if it's not solving their libido issues if it's not solving muscle mass
Starting point is 00:21:23 what problems does it solve? Or does it just create more problems because they are pouring gasoline on a fire that is not that is on a system that's already broken, really? Yeah. And you mean, you really answered your own question there in a beautiful way, because what happens is low testosterone was the outcome, but not the issue that led to the outcome. So what happens is people then get low testosterone. And of course, they're going to have symptoms of low testosterone because they are low testosterone, but then they inject testosterone, and then they feel fantastic, you will have more energy, you will have a better
Starting point is 00:22:04 libido, you will put on muscle mass. These things are incredibly well documented. All of this will begin to take place. But the reason as to why you had low testosterone to begin with, that huge question that you should be asking never actually got addressed. Do you have environmental pollutants in you? Do you have a parasitic bacterial fungal problem in your gut? Do you have environmental pollutants in you? Do you have a parasitic bacterial fungal problem in your gut? Do you have heavy metals?
Starting point is 00:22:27 Was it a problem, a psychological problem in your life that's resulting in certain stressors that is suppressing your testosterone? Sometimes it doesn't have to be fancy, you guys. Like, honestly, the amount of people, like what percentage of people complain of fatigue? A high percentage, right? What percentage of people are on percentage of people complain of fatigue a high percentage right what percentage of people are on their phone before bed right like sometimes it doesn't have to be wild like that blue light exposure has been demonstrated already documented to reduce melatonin 40 to 70%. Like, I mean, sorry, yeah, 50 to 70, rather. 5-0 to 7-0. That's an enormous reduction in melatonin, which results in enormous reduction in sleep quality, which by itself would have
Starting point is 00:23:15 caused fatigue, let alone the fact that poor sleep also causes low testosterone. So when we don't address these things, we actually didn't address our sleep issue. All we did was eject testosterone. How many other things is sleep connected to again? Seven million. When it comes to cardiovascular health, when it comes to all of the other hormones, testosterone is one of hundreds of hormones in the body. Sleep is connected to so many things.
Starting point is 00:23:45 And probably likely, like since sleep by itself would have overcome your fatigue in a huge way and would have allowed you to have more regular testosterone levels. In my opinion, looking at holistic health and actually solving people's issues at the root causal level, I think that would have been way more beneficial.
Starting point is 00:24:03 Nothing makes you feel better than having a good night's sleep. That's why I say don't lose weight, get healthier. That whole holistic thing makes you feel so much better than if you just fire some shot in the dark to overcome symptoms. Yeah, I was just having a half-baked thought while you were talking about that of like, what if instead of like testosterone clinics on every corner that you could go to to inject testosterone so you get more energy? It was like, well, here's the, uh, here's the clinic down the street that's going to reduce cortisol.
Starting point is 00:24:35 So you actually just sleep better. It'd be a lot, be a lot cooler. We'd be able to get, get to sleep, have less stress in our lives and, uh, everything else would kind of work itself out. All the, all the shit that like we should kind of already have, like how about the guy in the corner that actually teaches you how to optimize your taxes? Like that's, we don't learn that in school. How about the guy in the corner that tells you how to have a productive schedule? Because a lot of people aren't productive. They're just busy. And busyness leads to a lot of activity, but no
Starting point is 00:25:04 results, which is a very stressful and shitty way to live. So what about the guy to teach us about our taxes? What about the guy to teach us about optimizing our schedule? What about the guy to teach us about our sleep? What about the guy to teach us how to eat healthy? Like how many people have fatigue issues who also don't eat healthy? I don't think these correlations are wild.
Starting point is 00:25:22 Well, isn't that also like the the balance between i mean really in our in our world and our program between you and galpin it's like we have to have the internal health dialed in we also have like the performance and lifestyle optimization plan to go along with it because we can we can do the inside but if you're still just beating your head up against the wall and you can't figure out how to structure a day if you can't figure out how to go to bed at night, you don't wake up early enough, you don't go out and get some sunlight at least sometime in the morning to set your circadian rhythm, like you're kind of just spinning your wheels. It doesn't work unless you have both sides of it. For sure. And there's almost always some sort of root cause problem like happening, like
Starting point is 00:26:04 the amount of people like I asked you guys previously, how many people come to us fatigued? How many people come to us with some sort of gastrointestinal symptom? A ton. Yeah. A ton, right? Yeah. So the percentage is enormous.
Starting point is 00:26:18 Now, what percentage of those people did a stool analysis before they came to us? Zero. Basically nobody. I would say zero to five percent maybe right and lots of times we'll uncover a gut issue that led to an issue somewhere else and the reason why that issue was allowed to exist is because a they're not actually looking for root causes they're looking to manage symptoms. But B, because of those symptoms, the solutions that they have are incorrect. Like when we were in Boulder together, and then we did that podcast with that guy that was smarter than all three of us combined, Cody Burkhart.
Starting point is 00:26:59 Yeah. Yeah. That was interesting. He only asked questions like, how do we train people to get on Mars? I'm like, I was thinking like maybe adding a couple pounds of muscle and losing some body fat. Let's just do some lateral raises and we're going to be solid. Why do we have to take this thing all the way to Mars? Yeah. So like-
Starting point is 00:27:15 Like you're not asking the right questions. Well, I hadn't thought about Mars. Well, he had a quote that wasn't even his answer. He said, we're not in the stage of problem solving. We're in the stage of problem understanding. And I was like, God damn, like he's about to answer something else. And I'm already writing down his non-answer because he's so smart. I'm writing down his preface rather than his actual answer. Let me just steal your framework here real quick. I'm going to steal your preface.
Starting point is 00:27:44 But he said, we're in the stage of problem understanding and not in the stage of problem solving. Man, that hit me like a freaking brick because that's what people do right now. They have a certain symptom. Dude, you're not ready to problem solve. You don't know what the problem is. You're solving the problem with TRT when you don't understand the problem that led to low testosterone.
Starting point is 00:28:05 You need to actually take a step back, my man. You need to start problems understanding rather than problem solving. You skipped a huge step. And now we have no idea what's going on underneath the surface because now you feel good. You are on TRT, man. You will feel good. But I'm telling you, your body on the inside does not. And whatever was there is not going unaddressed. And I use that example of like somebody coming to us and having never done a stool analysis before and they have gastrointestinal symptoms like, yeah, we're going to find something that is probably the reason why the root cause behind whatever issue you came to us with, be it fatigue, and you've only done blood analysis before, or, you know, another like thing, how many people do you think have been exposed to environmental pollutants? A ton of them. Well, when's the last
Starting point is 00:29:01 time somebody got a heavy metal test or an environmental pollutant test? Almost never. So we find these things freaking all the time. And it's just a huge systemic solution to improve someone's total health rather than just isolate it into one thing. So, like, I can't, I don't understand how many more ways I could get that through to people. Because I'm a fan of TRT. I really am. Its safety profile is good. The benefits are kick-ass.
Starting point is 00:29:31 But I really think that you should run through the enormous list of things that result in low testosterone that you should address. But also result in a lot of other unfavorable things that don't get solved if you just mask your symptoms with TRT. A few things. Can you handle both sides, like the short and the long term? If you got all your labs done, you wanted short-term relief, could you do TRT for a period of time while you're cleaning up all the other things that led to it? And or if you go and try and clean up all the things that may have led to it, but then for some reason it still doesn't change, then are you a candidate for TRT?
Starting point is 00:30:08 Like you just said that there's, you'd like the safety profile and there's benefits to it, et cetera, et cetera. Like at what point does someone say, okay, now's the time. So at that point where I would personally say now's the time is way beyond just symptoms.
Starting point is 00:30:22 It's like lots of times people just say now's the time based on symptoms. I would actually want to do blood, urine, saliva stool. Okay, we're going to find something. So then let's solve that thing for the next six months and then retest. If we've confirmed that we've solved the thing and then your retest is still low, yes, in my opinion, now you are a candidate. You're a candidate for whatever
Starting point is 00:30:47 it was. It may, I don't know, it could be estrogen, it could be DHEA, it could be testosterone directly, it could be androstenedione, it could be just the conversion of androstenedione to testosterone, which is a lot of times a problem. You need vitamin E, lipoic acid, CoQ10, and zinc all just to convert androspindione to testosterone. And many people are low in vitamin E and zinc. That's hyper common. So like these things, they're out there and they exist. And in many, many, many cases, you will exhaust people's root cause issues and their hormones will restore to balance. And because you took a health first approach, many other things restored to balance along with hormone status. But if you have removed
Starting point is 00:31:32 all root causes, and it's still low, then yeah, knock yourself out, man. It's pretty common that you would have about one milligram per kilogram in medical TRT dose, it went to two milligrams. So if somebody is 100 kilos, then they would have 100 milligrams of testosterone per week. That's on the lower end. And then if symptoms don't improve in the medical world, they'll bump you up to two milligrams per kilo. And then you're at so that's a 220 pound person now taking 200 milligrams of testosterone per week. And mostly everybody feels pretty darn good in there. But more off label, underground kind of dosing is, is like alpha male type TRT is more like three milligrams per kilogram. So if somebody was 220 pounds, they'd be on 300 milligrams per week. But
Starting point is 00:32:26 basically, in the medical world, you'll get one to two milligrams per kilo. But if you talk to somebody in the underground, work in an endocrinology for sports performance, you're probably going to be around three milligrams per kilo. So that's for testosterone specifically, but you just mentioned DHEA and androcyne down and other androgens. Like when you say TRT, do you usually mean testosterone? Is that like 90% of the time that's the case? Like when, how does somebody know if, if DHEA is the answer or, or any of the other androgens? So they don't, unless they get tested. So TRT is testosterone replacement therapy. HRT is hormone replacement therapy. So I would just change my verbiage to HRT if I was talking about DHEA or angiostein dione or anything like that.
Starting point is 00:33:11 And in that scenario, you would only know if you did your testing, eliminated the root causes, and then did your testing again. And then you could fill in the gaps where you need to fill in the gaps. But DHEA is a is an over the counter option that's actually has an excellent long term safety profile. So it's kind of an it's it's an underrated one, especially if you've already exhausted your other root cause, your other root cause issues. When we started the show, you you mentioned the range for total testosterone and then and then mentioned later that free testosterone really is the thing that matters the most. Like, why do people continue to mostly reference total testosterone when free testosterone really is the thing that is kind of actually getting the job done, so to speak?
Starting point is 00:33:59 I wouldn't even be able to answer that because that's an excellent question. I would say probably because, and this is a guess, but it would be because adding free testosterone to a lab is a lot more expensive. So it probably just gets researched less. So that's just basically availability of data and what they can calculate total serum testosterone to rather than serum testosterone plus free testosterone. But I completely agree. And that's where efficiency comes into play. And you won't just see that in testosterone world either, like thyroids enormous for that. You can have like a low TSH and a fairly low T4 output. And I don't mean pathologically low, I just mean trending low,
Starting point is 00:34:38 but then an optimal T3. You're like, damn, that's just efficient conversion taking place. That's efficient conversion within the gut bacteria, within the mitochondria, within the liver and bile is doing its job. So that's that total amount. You'll see it in thyroid. You'll see it in testosterone. You'll see it. You'll see it everywhere.
Starting point is 00:34:56 And efficiency matters. And that's why I like here at Rapid, we do a full hormone panel looking at absolutely everything because you want to see what that entire pond and stream looks like and see what enzymes are being overactive and begin your overall diagnostic process from there. Yeah. So you take a person who they jumped the gun, so to speak, didn't get any of the lab testing, never searched for a root cause, and they just jumped right to TRT, and they do feel good.
Starting point is 00:35:26 And maybe they're taking on the higher end of the dosing. They're on the two milligrams per kilo or beyond. Or maybe they're just straight up, quote unquote, doing steroids or abusing their access, et cetera. And they're hearing this, and they're thinking, man, I don't know. I've been doing this for a long time, but I'm kind of worried what it's doing to my body under the hood. Maybe I should maybe I should take a step back, maybe get off of it or reduce my dose or or get off of it and try to find the root cause. They want to they want to revamp their whole situation. How would you go about doing that while while managing the inevitable symptoms that are likely to arise?
Starting point is 00:36:06 I don't think you have to come off to do labs. Like I would really because if the testosterone is not going to take away your mercury, it's not going to take away your arsenic, it's not going to take away your environmental pollutants, it's not going to take away all these other contributing factors, we'll still see it, It'll pop up in your your biochemical circadian rhythm function between cortisol and melatonin, it's going to pop up in your heavy metal, it's going to pop up in your environmental pollutants going to pop up in your stool analysis, like testosterone is not going to impact your stool analysis at all. Like so we're going to see all of those things in there as well. So I actually wouldn't even come off. If you're feeling
Starting point is 00:36:45 good, I wouldn't even tell you to come off, I would just get all of your testing done anyways, because we're gonna see any kind of issue anyways. But as you were answering, as you were asking that question, I realized I didn't even answer your previous question about somebody, if they could go on while they work on the root cause and then come off. I wouldn't recommend that because I think it's probably just going to delay suppression. The quickest way for your body to stop doing something is to give a free source of it. So if there's any incoming exogenous hormone, say testosterone, if you inject exogenous testosterone, your endogenous production will absolutely shut down. The quickest thing to shut something down in the body is to give your body a free resource of it. Why? Because your body is the ultimate efficiency machine.
Starting point is 00:37:37 If it doesn't need to do something, it won't. The whole, if you don't use it, you lose it kind of thing. That's real in the body. Your body reacts very quickly. So if somebody has low testosterone, and they want to supplement with testosterone while they work on the root cause, I think it would be a defeating tactic because you're going to feel pretty good on the testosterone and then you're going to remove the root cause. But then when you come off the testosterone, you need to restart the
Starting point is 00:38:05 wheel again on the hypothalamic pituitary gonadal axis. And that takes a while that your body is basically talking with my hands. For the for the audio listeners, imagine there being like a high line, a high horizontal line and a low horizontal line. When your body, for hormones, exists between these two lines. When hormones pass the high horizontal line, that's when there's going to be endocrine shutdown because your body says, hey, I've seen this much currently in circulation,
Starting point is 00:38:44 so I'm not going to make any more. So your body, once it passes a certain threshold, it's going to shut down the hypothalamus pituitary gonadal axis and completely shut down hormone production. Now, hormones have a half life. So for example, testosterone cypionate is going to have a half life anywhere from, say, seven to eight days or seven to 10 days, depending on what research you look at. So that half-life is going to take a while to come down. So, like, for example, if you inject 500 milligrams of test sipionate this week and then you inject another 500 in seven days, well, let's pretend's pretend that the half life is a magical seven days. If you inject 500 milligrams today, and then you inject another 500 milligrams next week,
Starting point is 00:39:30 which is very common in bodybuilding cycling dosages. Well, half of that went through its half life. So that means we are we still had 250 milligrams of testosterone in our system by the time of our next injection of another 500. And then that went through its half-life. Well, now we had 500 left in the system and we injected another 500. So now that goes through its half-life and you can see how that matters when designing a performance enhancing drug course. If you are designing every single drug you take needs a purpose, it needs a function, you need to understand the half life, you need to understand the metabolization rates, because this is all
Starting point is 00:40:09 going to work in your favor or not, depending on how you design your cycle. Like if you just go on a forum, and like someone says, week one to 10, do this week one to four do this. It's like there's there's barely any utility to that. It's a fucking horrible way to approach this. You need a real coach. But, you know, I'm getting sidetracked here. As those half-lives continue to build up, you've got a lot of testosterone in your system. And it's going to take a long time to metabolize down to that lower line that I talked about in the beginning of this insane rant. So you are going to metabolize on all those half-lives for probably eight to 10 weeks, which is another
Starting point is 00:40:50 fucking stupid reason why people start their PCT after their last shot. Like motherfucker, you're going through half-lives for like eight weeks. I don't know why you're starting your PCT right now. It doesn't make a lick of sense, but again, I'm going to get in another rant. So let's not do that. You're going to half life your way all the way down until you reach the bottom line. Now the bottom line is hypogonadism. Your body says, holy shit, there's no hormones here anymore. Now I've got to restart LH and FSH to go kick off testosterone production again. So that huge long rant was basically outlining when your body passes certain threshold of injectable testosterone, you're going to suppress your natural testosterone because you're eliminating your root cause during that entire
Starting point is 00:41:38 time. You're going to be building up levels via half-life in your system to quite high amounts. And that has to half-life its way all the way out of there. So that's going to take eight to 10 weeks until you hit hypogonadism. Then once you hit hypogonadism, then hypothalamus pituitary gonadal access restart takes place, which doesn't happen overnight, which is another climb of your body trying to get lhs lh and fsh and testosterone back online to then you'll finally fucking feel good maybe 12 to 14 16 weeks later sometimes longer so i'm very big on eliminate that root cause and then let your own natural levels go up without the suppression. If you do the suppression, the whole process will take longer for what you're trying to
Starting point is 00:42:32 accomplish. So you keep mentioning the hypothalamic pituitary gonadal axis, and you just mentioned LH a couple of times. Like, at what point is Clomid a better option than straight injectable trt or is that not a good option in your mind um dude like this is contrarian but it's not so if you go on um like forums and shit um you are suggested to run say like a combination of nova and clomid and hcg a lot of these HPTA restart things. If you go to an endocrinologist, they'll just take you off of everything. Like it's very, very common. It's
Starting point is 00:43:13 just like, oh, you've been on steroids for that many years, and you've lost your fertility. And now you're trying to get pregnant again. Okay, come off everything. I'll see you in six months. There's no long drawn out bodybuilding, Nova, Clomid. And this is from an endocrinologist. Somebody who's actually a specialist in this field has tons of formal education, tons of clinical experience, all kinds and has to manage a ton of risks due to insurance and things like this. It's very, very common for them to just hey come off of everything and allow the body to restart and i think that in a lot of ways we can kind of trick ourself
Starting point is 00:43:53 by moving by doing a kind of protocol that includes say nova clomid that kind of thing i know where you're going because clomid's good for fsh stimulation as well so we can get some chromatogenesis in addition to lh getting testosterone synthesis so clomid can do those things but it is a fertility drug and um i think in a lot of cases we kind of make ourselves feel better but we kind of only just went from one drug to the next we're just going from and then we're chasing another rabbit and then we're chasing this we're chasing that And there's no actual systemic break for the body from drug use. So again, that this this actually does depend upon blood work, because you will have predispositions where someone may be more, maybe more predisposed, I guess I'll stick with that word for Nova use or predisposed
Starting point is 00:44:46 for Clomid use or predisposed for, um, HCG during a cycle to maintain fertility. There's a lot of things that, um, would either support or negate use of these compounds, but, um, the fact that they're mandatory is garbage. And the fact that they are prescribed blindly without labs to bodybuilders everywhere and strength athletes in general, I think is complete garbage as well. So a lot of that was said within the context of post-psychotherapy. I mostly meant for like the, the person who's not doing steroids and they're not looking to do, um, who's that guy?
Starting point is 00:45:30 I know like crazy. Hold on. What are we talking about? Yeah. We just lost our whole audience. Dan said, it's okay to have low testosterone. If I heard him correctly at the beginning,
Starting point is 00:45:40 cause it makes you wiser. And then no steroids. Bummer. No, no. Do all all the steroids the moral of this episode is to get on every cycle with no labs or professional direction just take all the drugs yeah just take drugs you'll be fine go to go to tijuana i don't know if you've ever been to tijuana if you walk around with anyone with any amount of muscle mass you will be offered steroids at every street corner. Like Diana ball at your local pharmacy. It's like, yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:07 Okay. Well, once one small handful with breakfast is the prescription. So then you're just, you're good to go. You don't actually need to do any of this stuff. Just go to Tijuana. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:18 It's really crazy. Actually. How have you been down there? It's literally like, I've never, I've never been down there. It's like on the front window. It's like on the front window. It's like, we've got
Starting point is 00:46:27 Clareton, we've got Advil, we've got Diana Ball. You're like, whoa, that really got escalated quickly. They got it all. And I trust none of it. I'm like, I have no idea what's in that box. I'm not taking it. If you're going somewhere where the
Starting point is 00:46:43 Diana Ball is beside the Advil, you're going somewhere where the diana balls beside the advil you're like wait yeah so no that that that question was mostly uh if a person is just they have all the symptoms they go to the trt clinic and then maybe they get some type of testing aside from just testing their testosterone levels uh and their lh is low and then the the guy says ongoing you can take clomid to stimulate LH production and thereby testosterone production, and then you don't need to do injectables at all. So it's not post-psychotherapy. It's just in perpetuity.
Starting point is 00:47:14 You could do this, take a pill rather than an injection. How does that compare? What are the pros and cons of each? How do they compare to each other? The problem with Clomid is actually connected to poor mental health outcomes. So it makes problems to bring this question back to bodybuilding PCT. It makes PCT worse a lot of times because people are already losing their muscle. They're losing their strength and decreasing their testosterone due to shutdown.
Starting point is 00:47:42 But then Clomid actually exacerbates certain mental health issues on top of that. But if you're somebody who, who doesn't have any adverse mental health effects to Clomid, and your doctor has looked at the context of your case study and said, yeah, it makes sense here for ongoing hepatic ignition, we'll say to keep this thing rolling, then I don't really see any, any, any problem with that. It won't compare it to DRT. That's for sure. Cause you're still going to be within the confines of your own production. Um, so if like a real hammer solution is what you're after, nothing's going to be injectable testosterone. Um, and injectable testosterone will likely have
Starting point is 00:48:25 positive mental health benefits rather than negative ones. So I would be more inclined based on my knowledge, and also probably likely heavily biased from the populations I've worked with, I would be much more inclined to utilize injectable due to it avoiding the mental health outcomes and still having an excellent safety profile when reasonably dosed. Gotcha. Because I know a lot of clinics, they probably have a handful of clientele that show up and they go, well, I kind of want the benefits, but I really don't want to take a shot all the time, you know, every other day or once a week or whatever, whatever track they're on, you know, for the rest of my life. What do you got
Starting point is 00:49:04 for me? You got anything else that doesn't inquire, require me to, you know, for the rest of my life. Uh, what do you got for me? You got anything else that doesn't inquire, require me to, you know, not just take the shot, but like have needles around all the time and take them with me everywhere I go. And then all the hassle around disposal and like, you know, a lot of people just don't want the headache. Sure. So you can get a pellet injected into your body that slowly breaks down over time and releases hormone. Test gel also exists as well. So you could go with testosterone gel. You could go with the pellet.
Starting point is 00:49:33 You could go with something like Clomid or Nova, or you could just get your shit together and find out why it's low. Because I think 99% of the people listening to this have some sort of root cause that just goes unaddressed due to a lack of analyzation of their hidden stressors. You mentioned zinc and boron and a handful of different vitamins, minerals and whatnot. Like, as far as vitamin and mineral deficiencies, what are the big ones that could really cause trouble with testosterone or any of the other important hormones just for feeling happy and normal and full energy, etc? Sure.
Starting point is 00:50:14 Yeah. So vitamin E and zinc are big in converting angiocene nylone over into testosterone. Magnesium and boron are very important in breaking and unbinding testosterone from sex hormone binding globulin. Vitamin D deficiencies are associated with lower testosterone as well. And same with just magnesium and zinc for that matter, beyond the pathways I just discussed, zinc, magnesium and vitamin D are extremely well demonstrated in the literature, when low, when restored back to good status, they will increase testosterone, but more isn't better. Once you've got adequate status of those vitamins and minerals, you will have improved testosterone, but not if you have too much of
Starting point is 00:50:57 those vitamins and minerals. Those are all big one as well. Vitamin B5 is required when combining cholesterol with vitamin B5 to form pregnenolone. And pregnenolone is your mother of all sex hormones, you need it to make anything you need pregnenolone to make progesterone, cortisol, androstenedione, testosterone, DHEA, all of the estrogens that all begins with pregnenolone. And that requires B5 that's synthesized with B5 and cholesterol in the mitochondria of cells. So that's a big component as well. Vitamin B6 is another one that's kind of underrated and under discussed. But vitamin B6, like go ahead and just Google vitamin B6 and mental health, vitamin B6 and mood. B6 is deeply connected to a lot of mental health outcomes. And mental health is deeply connected to testosterone levels. So I really think like through the back door,
Starting point is 00:51:54 B6 plays a big role. B6 also lowers prolactin. So if somebody has slightly higher prolactin, you'll be more prone to looking at B6. But B6, as far as its effects on dopamine, its effects on serotonin, its effects on melatonin, there's even B6 deficiencies connected to schizophrenia. Like B6 is wildly important for mental health, protein synthesis, and all these hormone pathways. So to relist all of those would be quite a bit, but it was vitamin E and zinc for androstenedione, zinc, magnesium and vitamin D for testosterone in general, but specifically magnesium and boron for unbinding it from sex hormone binding globulin, vitamin B5 for the formation process of pregnenolone and then um
Starting point is 00:52:46 and then uh what was the the the final one that i went into i've just lost it yeah b6 b6 the last one for the backdoor reasons yeah so all of those you know that's a big reason why i'm big on actually multivitamins and multiminerals some people kind kind of pick on those, but multivitamins have some of the more research behind them than anything else. Like vitamins that if I was going to go to an island, I wouldn't be taken and sit in a weird situation where you can only take one supplement with you to this island. It'd be a multi. That's what I would say.
Starting point is 00:53:21 When you look at nutritional biochemistry, it all involves vitamins and minerals. And curcumin is not on this list. That's a rate limiting factor. You know, these certain herbs and adaptogens, they're good within certain contexts, but no pathways operate optimally without max optimal vitamins and minerals. And again, how many people have had those tested? Very little. So a lot of a lot of people jump into these things, which again, by the way, if it's not obvious, I'm not against it. I work with a ton of people on TRT. I also work with a ton of people who take illegal TRT. I work with a ton of these people. I'm just a big fan of promoting health first and only using it when you need to. So as a blanket statement for most people, no need to find a root cause, like before you take a multivitamin, just go take a multivitamin. It's a good catch all for the vast, vast, vast majority of people, the downsides very low, the upsides potentially high. Yeah. And the classic old supplement ZMA is actually pretty, pretty good. ZMA is a combination of zinc,
Starting point is 00:54:25 magnesium and B6. And people are notoriously low in all three. Plus, that helps with sleep quality. So the fact that you can take that that's why ZMA does have some connections to testosterone literature purely because of what it contains. So that enhancing sleep quality plus providing the minerals for optimal hormone synthesis, I would say a multi plus ZMA would be an excellent overall kind of foundation to make sure a lot of these hormonal pathways are operating the way that they should. Yeah, for a quick recommendation, for the most part, we offer our clients and we take ourselves that Thorne two a day multivitamin. If someone's looking for a good source, that's a good option.
Starting point is 00:55:06 Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, Thorne, their multi, their basic nutrients is excellent. Their elite athlete, AMPM, is excellent as well. They have a magnesium bisglycinate as well that I'm a real big fan of um for basically just foundational use and then i really like their basic b complex just as a as a foundational supplement very very common i'll put it in people's protocol um but also they have a basic b complex six which is still the full b complex but a greater emphasis on b6 for a lot of situations just like this. Beautiful.
Starting point is 00:55:49 Dan Garner, where can the people find you? I can be found at Dan Garner Nutrition on Instagram. Don't send me your lab work with your testosterone levels on them. I got a bunch of this, those after a recent podcast. I can imagine with Mark Bell, they just sent you all a picture of it. Can you just do the same thing? I just get DMs of lab, screenshots of labs. I'm like, guys,
Starting point is 00:56:10 I can't just do this on Instagram DM. It's way more complicated than this. But give me a follow at DanGarnerNutrition on Instagram. Check out my courses at CoachGarner.com. Get your blood work at Insideidetracker.com slash Garner. And that's it. You never
Starting point is 00:56:29 know what the downstream effects of doing something incredible are going to be. Like doing a live lab reading and then your DMs get loaded with everyone's labs. Yeah. That's incredible. Yeah. Fantastic. Turns out you should probably be a client of mine
Starting point is 00:56:46 that's so good doug larson yeah and by the way you can go listen to that it's like you did like four hours or something like that with mark over over a two-part episode on powercast so yeah five hours of dan garner spitting knowledge to Mark Bell. So go check that out. I'm on Instagram, Douglas E. Larson. I'm Anders Varner, at Anders Varner. We are Barbell Shrugged at Barbell underscore Shrugged. Make sure you get over to RapidHealthReport.com where you can see Dan Garner read my labs and then don't send them to him in the DMs either.
Starting point is 00:57:19 He doesn't need to read your stool sample in his Instagram feed. That's RapidHealthreport.com. And you can actually see him talk about my low testosterone that I had last year when I got all my labs done. We'll be doing them again here at some point soon so we can write that. Rapidealthreport.com. Friends, we'll see you guys next week.

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