I'm 56 and last test was something like 340ng/dl if I remember right. Not rockbottom, but not energetic either. And I have almost no libido; some of that is probably psychological, but it's not for lack of wanting.
I'm 56 and last test was something like 340ng/dl if I remember right. Not rockbottom, but not energetic either. And I have almost no libido; some of that is probably psychological, but it's not for lack of wanting.
Just a quick note to PMDL and some of the others who questioned whether my hypothesis of barbell activity possibly stimulating T production was sound:
I was re-reading an article from Strong Enough by Rippetoe when I encountered this sentence in a discussion on the male female performance gap which is attributable to men having more T and unusually high performing women; "Or it may be due to an adaptation to continued high levels of workload through an increase in endogenous production of either testosterone od dihydroepiandrosterone sulfate, a slight increase that beneficially affects recovery and performance..." p. 123 Strong Enough.
Evidently, Rippetoe and his esteemed editors believe this hypothesis is sound enought to include it in Rip's book. I do not know whether this phenomenon (higher T production as a response to barbelling) is likely, but it is clearly possible. I feel vindicated
Now if your testes cannot properly function to produce T, that's a different story.