Florida MD: A pleasure meeting you Michael. Would you mind telling me what kind of interventions are you researching on currently? I understand if you cannot disclose details, but just to know what areas are you exploring
MG: Certainly, I am not bound by confidentiality on anything I am researching at the present time: (1) optimal compounded testosterone gel + Clomiphene 50 mg/day to achieve free T levels in the range of 20 – 25; next (2) optimal Armour Thyroid (60 mg tablets, twice per day or three times per day) dose to lower HbA1C to 5.0 or below for patients with normal thyroid atrophy with aging; (3) dose of virgin coconut oil required to boost HDL for average man, e.g., from 35 to 55, also factoring in concentrated doses of EPA 500 mg gelcaps. Then I have some research on optimizing health insurance benefits.
Florida MD: very interesting, do you document TST deficiencies as well as declined Thyroid function to enter those patients in the studies? at what ranges? why Armour and no other thyroid derivatives? what percentage of improvement do you expect on the HDL levels?
I have a friend having problems with his current insurance, he is 58 yo, do you have any recommendations for a plan that will cover his HTN, HLD and Bladder Ca without incurring in substantial expenses?
MG: I am not sure what TST means. I looked it up on the Internet and web pages came up about Vitamin B-12 and Folate. So then I called a medical doctor colleague and read your message. She had never heard of TST. We both thought you might have mistyped and meant TSH. If so, I am not keeping track of TSH, because Armour Thyroid would cause the pituitary to produce less TSH.
Armour Thyroid was chosen, because it is the oldest and perhaps best known of the desiccated porcine thyroid drugs. NatureThroid and WestThroid are identical drugs; Armour contains dextrose and one other corn product as filler.
As far as HDL, we are not looking at total % gain in HDL. Instead, we are looking at the critical Total Cholesterol/HDL ratio and striving for values less than 3.1 — which seems difficult for 99% of Americans to achieve.
Your friend should go to ehealthinsurance.com and fill in his age and location and look at the 100+ results that come up. I’m afraid with a pre-existing cancer diagnosis, most plans will automatically exclude him. Your friend will benefit from 2014′s health care reform where pre-existing conditions will no longer be allowed to exclude coverage. I’m afraid your friend’s only option may be to seek a state-run health insurance plan aimed at people with expensive conditions.
Florida MD: TST is one acronym used for testosterone.
MG: We use capital T. Yes, T values are monitored — free and total.
MG: I don’t think there is controversy; there is a lot of stupidity. Total T numbers can float wherever they need to go, but optimal free T for middle aged and senior men is 20 – 25. Having said that, I would not have a problem with a patient setting free T to reach 30, if he is feeling weak when working out and trying to feel more normal. Excess T as you know can cause heart attacks and brain cancer — in essence we learn from the mistakes of steroid abusers treating them almost like guinea pigs.
This kind of article and the 35+ references has shaped my thinking:
http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2004/feb2004_cover_test_02.htm?source=search&key=optimal%20testosterone%20level
Florida MD: This approach reminds me of the WHI (Women’s Health Initiative) a few years back when HRT (Hormone Replacement Therapy) was advocated; only through research definitive answers can be elucidated
MG: True. I find it puzzling that low testosterone has been found to be a risk factor for heart disease. But the multivariate statistical models used show, e.g., an 8% increase in risk of heart attack from 25% to 33% for men with low T values. Yet high T values can trigger heart attacks as well. Finding that delicate balance is really tricky. Without Life Extension’s advocacy, I would not have gotten interested in andropause and HRT for men. At times, I feel almost like it makes no difference long term. So that ambivalence helps me treat pro-HRT articles with a degree of skepticism. The range of 20 – 25 for free T is based on the level of free T in a healthy 20 year old.
Florida MD: All hormones and in general the entire homeostasis requires very precise fine tuning, even thyroid hormones as beneficial as they can be, when not within proper range could be deleterious, hence the relevance of self regulating mechanisms with stimulatory and inhibitory pathways and circadian rhythms, very hard to be accomplished with external supplementation.
MG: How many patients do you have in your practice? Of those patients, how many are males over 45 who have asked you about starting HRT?
Florida MD: HRT for men is still a very incipient topic, most straight men are not so concerned with hypogonadism since there is not a well established concept of such in the general population as of yet, this topic is way more prevalent among MSM and particularly HIV male patients
MG: Interesting. The American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine holds annual conferences in Orlando and Las Vegas. For the last few years, those conferences, and all the anti-aging docs locally, have focused on hormone therapy. Now HRT for women has been around for 30 years. So if HRT is now the focus of anti-aging physicians, then it is the men that attract their attention. I find it curious that they are not focusing instead on the most important topic: the inflammatory diet and stopping premature aging by having elevated serum glucose. But instead the anti-aging medical crowd wants to talk about T and T therapy.
Florida MD: As scientific as we could be in our cognition, there is always room for sexual rationalization hence the relevance of libido, performance and well being as part of the hedonistic human nature; one of the biggest problems in the American society is the secondary development of medical conditions stemming from unhealthy life styles and the development of remediating strategies once the damage is done, hence sustaining a very profitable industry that would not be so prolific if preventive medicine was implemented from very early.
MG: You and I agree 100%. I have said at every opportunity, and I teach this in my Health Economics course, the American health care system is focused too much on treating people after conditions arise and not enough on prevention. That is how I became interested in the metabolic syndrome and prevention, because docs seemed incapable of stemming the epidemic of obesity, diabetes, and to a lesser extent cancer.
Florida MD: I am a true believer and kind of a good example of effective preventive medicine, that has been my personal approach most of my life.
MG: Although I will be voting for Obama in 2012, I readily admit “health care reform” is dead in the water without shifting emphasis to prevention. Obama thought he was doing a great thing by creating the yearly physical exam benefit for seniors. Instead, he would have done better to create a yearly blood test benefit with suggested and optimal ranges for lipids, hormones, and HbA1C levels. If I walked into your office as a new patient and displayed a vast knowledge of prevention + (more importantly) a dozen proactive measures I was taking for prevention, would you be thrilled?
Florida MD: as I told you before, I definitely prefer patients that take ownership of their well being, I encourage healthy and individualized choices, since one size does not fit all for sure.
MG: Like FL, TN has no income tax. My former primary care doc in Oak Ridge just opened up his own solo practice. But he is about 65, so I was surprised he would split from his partners. He is one of many examples of a doctor who could benefit from taking on a new partner and then eventually retiring within a few years. Knoxville would have even more opportunities for you, but it also comes with more congestion and probably higher overhead costs. Oak Ridge has a greater shortage of primary care docs, in general, but high quality primary care docs, in particular — which is why people like me look in Knoxville for docs.