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Think You Know What Causes Low Testosterone Think Again

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Published 16 Apr 2020

Think you know what causes low testosterone? Learn how to increase it here - https://umzu.com/pages/testrox-supplement What If Low Testosterone Is Much Easier To Solve Naturally Than You Think? Learn how to boost testosterone naturally. Are you experiencing low libido, chronic fatigue, poor sleep, hair loss, increased body fat, muscle loss, or depression? If so, it’s highly possible that you could have low testosterone production, also known as low T. Ask your doctor, or Google it, and you’ll most likely be told that low T is caused by age. That it’s normal for testosterone levels to decline over time in men… and that there’s nothing you can do to reverse this “natural process” other than take hormone replacement therapy for the rest of your life. Most guys, including doctors, seem to think this… and it’s perpetuated by the media, but why? Why has the conventional wisdom around this condition resolved itself to blaming “time” for your T decline? Is this even true? And is there anything you can do to naturally “turn back the clock” on your biology so you can keep producing healthy levels of testosterone naturally into your old age? I think the single biggest myth I’ve heard perpetuated over and over, countless times, is that you cannot naturally increase your testosterone production… that, once it starts to decline, there’s nothing you can do about it. And the reason people believe this has its roots entirely in the concept that time itself is what causes low T. You can’t control time, right? If it’s just time, “the natural aging process,” then it’s out of your hands entirely. For example, possibly the most recent famous study to present this observation about population-wide testosterone decline - the one that garnered all the headlines was a 2007 study published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. The researchers concluded that, since the 1980’s, male testosterone levels (both total & bioavailable) have been on an average decline of about 1% per year. This means that, a 45 year old guy today has roughly 30% lower testosterone levels than a 45 year old in 1980. The researchers could not specify any direct causation, and concluded that the cause was too complex to accurately deduce at the moment, saying that “These results indicate that recent years have seen a substantial, and as yet unrecognized, age-independent population-level decrease in T in American men, potentially attributable to birth cohort differences or to health or environmental effects not captured in observed data.” The opening line of the study sums up the conventional sentiment about testosterone decline in men, “CONSIDERABLE LOSS OF serum testosterone, low t, is thought to be a feature of male chronological aging.” But is “chronological aging” ie. time-based aging, really the cause of a decline of testosterone production in the male body, or is this just a conveniently lazy explanation of a much more nuanced physiological, environmental, and cultural issue? Low testosterone production in your body is a direct result of something YOU did… The way you eat, the food you put into your body, the stress you inflict upon yourself, the environmental exposure you allow to endocrine disrupting chemicals, and the activities you do every single day. It all comes back to choices you make. Testosterone is the hormone that turns males into men and is responsible for major differences between men and women. Testosterone has a tremendous impact on phenotype, physiology and psychology of the individual, it is the driving force for reproduction and has an impact on society, culture and politics. Unlike other endocrine organs, well-hidden within the body, the test-s, as the source of testosterone, have an exposed position and are thus quite vulnerable and also easily accessible for external manipulation, including forceful removal. Therefore, quite early in the history of mankind, the effects of testosterone or rather their lack, became known and history is full of examples how this knowledge was applied. Is TRT Worth The Risk? As the years roll on, and more research is conducted, testosterone replacement therapy has begun to be medically implicated as a causal factor for increased incidence of prostate cancer, male breast cancer, BPH (also known as benign prostatic hyperplasia), and development of sleep apnea and an increased risk of developing serious cardiovascular disease. TRT has now been shown to increase prostate size by 12%. And scientists have known since 1982 that exogenous testosterone therapy makes prostate cancer worse, however despite these known risks, the prescription rate of TRT, even in patients with prostate problems or risk-factors, has continued to increase population wide. Normal natural production of testosterone in men has been proven to not cause prostate cancer but administration of TRT has been shown time and again to speed the development of prostate cancer.

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