
Originally Posted by
Youthful55guy
Absolutely!
I have a very similar problem with similar numbers. The problem with high SHBG is that it's difficult to get a doctor to take you seriously when you have Total T levels well within normal. They often do not test for Free T or bioavailable (different tests but they tell you the same thing), even when you tell them you feel like crap. Their first inclination is to hand a script for antidepressants to get you out of their face. believe me, it's frustrating. You have to pretty much interview docs to find which ones do and do not believe that SHBG can be a problem. Unfortunately, the ones that do are generally private TRT specialists or TRT clinics and they are usually expensive and don't take insurance. Again, frustrating.
Regarding treatment, your options are limited. Go ahead and try the various OTC fixes for SHBG, but in my experience with SHBG numbers as high as yours your probably won't have a lot of luck, but it's worth a shot. Your second option is to jack up the Total T high enough to saturate the SHBG protein so that enough spills over to Free T that you at least get up to mid-range. With a SHBG value of 70, my experience is that you will need a Total T of around 1400 to 1500 ng/dL, but this may cause polycythemia problems in the long run and you end up having to dump blood, which can lead to other side-effects.
My current approach is to go off the reservation and use a drug that is no longer sold in the USA (for marketing, not safety reasons). It's an oral anabolic steroid called Winstrol (stanozolol). My experience is that very small doses (5 mg twice per day) is sufficient. Others I've talked to say that even 5 is too much and still others say they have to go up to 15 mg. So dosing appears to be variable and needs to be supported with labs. The drug is readily available overseas through normal bodybuilding steroid sources. Typical BB doses are in the 50 to 100 mg range and they do have some potential liver damage issues, but at 10 mg per day, my liver labs always seem to be OK.
Another option is a drug that is available in the USA if you can get a doc to prescribe it off label (good luck) and it's call Danazol. I have not attempted this treatment, mainly because stanozolol works and is cheaper), but others I've communicated with have had luck with doses in the 20 mg per day range. I've heard conflicting evidence that it does not actually lower SHBG, but rather competes with T for binding sites on it, so the word is still out. however, it does seem to be effective.
Special note: with either stanozolol or Danzol, you will have to still do TRT because they both suppress the natural production of T. The benefit is that you can get by with lower T doses and minimize the side-effects of excessively large T doses.
Good luck!