
Originally Posted by
Technologist
At this point you have TRT induced polycythemia.
Some of the important symptoms include: Easy bruising, easy bleeding, blood clot formation (potentially leading to heart attacks, strokes, blood clots in the lungs [pulmonary embolism], bone and joint pain (hip pain or rib pain),
Headache, high blood pressure, itching, itching after taking a shower or bath, fatigue, dizziness and abdominal pain. Neuropathy (numbness, tingling, and/or pain, especially in the hands and feet) and brain fog.
You need to forcibly up your fluid intake many times a day for now.
At 61% Hematocrit and high hemoglobin it's actually counter productive. Athletes dope to reach levels "Below" your level around (50%) and if they overdue it hampers performance. Your blood is way too thick right now and could kill if not corrected.
I know many on this forum would die to be on 200mg's per week TRT but it's just going to give you endless phlebotomy problems. Simply missing not getting a blood donation for 2-3 months could be a killer.
On the therapeutic phlebotomy you'll probably need at least 2-3 pints (weekly or every two weeks) taken to get your levels in the normal range. After that you'll be good for the blood donations if your TRT is brought down to 150mg week or less.
Most blood donation centers don't check Hematocrit only Hemoglobin. Some red crosses do if they have a centrifuge to test Hematocrit. Find a Red cross "mobile unit" and ask if they test Hematocrit.
The Red cross cutoff is higher at <19 for Hemoglobin. Some hospitals will still allow you to donate if you are on TRT by a doctors prescription and have high hemoglobin. Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach is one example.