Your testosterone is dialed in at 900 ng/dL, your free T is in range, and you still feel flat. You've blamed the dose, blamed the ester, blamed the carrier oil. The problem isn't the testosterone. The problem is that testosterone doesn't work in a vacuum — it operates inside a triangle with thyroid and cortisol, and if either of those two corners is broken, your TRT response will plateau no matter how much you inject. The practitioner corpus is unambiguous on this: men who optimize T without addressing the T3 conversion pathway and the HPA axis end up with great labs and a flat life.
What's actually happening at the cellular level
Three loops are running simultaneously, and they share substrate.
Loop 1 — Thyroid conversion. Your thyroid pumps out mostly T4 (inactive). The cellular work of thyroid hormone — mitochondrial output, body temperature, mental drive — is done by T3 (active). The conversion happens via D1/D2 deiodinase enzymes, and it requires selenium, iodine, iron, and — critically — testosterone itself. Practitioner consensus: testosterone facilitates the conversion of T4 into T3, which is one of the reasons men typically run slightly less hormone replacement than women. So your TRT is supposed to be helping your T3. If you still feel cold, foggy, and constipated on therapeutic T levels, the conversion pathway is broken — and the most common breakage is reverse T3 shunting: T4 getting pushed sideways into rT3 (inactive metabolite) instead of forward into T3. With a reverse T3 issue, the corpus is direct: lower the T4 or run T3 alone.
Loop 2 — The pregnenolone steal. Pregnenolone is the master precursor, made from cholesterol. From pregnenolone, your body branches into DHEA → testosterone/estradiol on one path, and into progesterone → cortisol on the other. Under chronic stress (poor sleep, over-training, work load, inflammation), the cortisol path steals the substrate. Pregnenolone gets shunted into cortisol production instead of into DHEA and downstream androgens. The corpus describes this directly: if you're stressed enough for long enough, you deplete the precursor pool for testosterone, estrogen, DHEA, and even vitamin D — all of which share that common upstream node. On TRT, you bypass the testes (you're injecting the end product), but you do not bypass the steal — your DHEA, your adrenal-derived androgens, and your stress resilience still depend on pregnenolone being available. This is why some men on perfect T numbers still feel adrenally cooked.
Loop 3 — The estradiol balance. Testosterone aromatizes into estradiol. Estradiol is not the enemy — it is required for bone density, joint comfort, cognitive function, libido, and cardiovascular protection. The corpus is clear: blocking estrogen aggressively at the onset of TRT with an aromatase inhibitor is a misunderstanding of biology. An AI should never be used at the onset of therapeutic testosterone unless there is an indicated medical need. The target is balance, not suppression. The practitioner range for E2 on TRT is roughly 20–30 pg/mL with a sensitive assay, in proportion to your total T. Crush E2 below that and you get the symptoms men blame on "low T": joint pain, flat libido, depression, fat that won't leave the lower body.
The protocol — supporting the supporting axes
This is the Phase 2 layer that goes on top of your base TRT protocol from Chapter 3. You introduce these only after labs confirm the need.
| Compound | Dose | Route | Frequency | Evidence Tier | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liothyronine (T3 / Cytomel) | Start low, titrate to symptoms + free T3 mid-upper range | Oral | Daily, split AM/midday | 🔵 Clinical | Used when rT3 is elevated or T4 monotherapy fails. Corpus: 98% of patients do well on T4+T3 or T3 alone; T4 alone often does not work. With reverse T3 issue: lower T4 or run T3 only. |
| Pregnenolone | 25–50 mg (typical practitioner range) | Oral | Daily AM | 🟢 Expert | Restores the upstream precursor pool when the steal has depleted DHEA and downstream androgens. [Specific TRT-stack dose ceiling thin in corpus — track DHEA-S and adjust] |
| DHEA | Practitioner-titrated to DHEA-S mid-upper range for age | Oral | Daily AM | 🟢 Expert | Corpus notes the greatest effect demographic is actually women, but in stressed men on TRT with depleted DHEA-S, restoration normalizes sleep, energy, and recovery. |
| Anastrozole | 0.25–0.5 mg | Oral | 2x/week, titrated to E2 | 🟢 Expert | Only if E2 is symptomatic-high on a sensitive assay. Not prophylactic. Goal: E2 in the 20–30 pg/mL window, not crushed. |
| Gonadorelin | 200 mcg | SubQ | Daily or EOD | 🟢 Expert | Maintains testicular function and upstream HPG signaling; preserves intratesticular steroidogenesis (including pregnenolone) during exogenous T. |
| Selenium + iodine + iron (if deficient) | Repletion-level dosing per labs | Oral | Daily | 🔵 Clinical | Required cofactors for D1/D2 deiodinase. Corpus: these directly facilitate T4→T3 conversion. Don't supplement blind — test ferritin, selenium, iodine first. |
| Kisspeptin-10 | 50–100 mcg | SubQ | Daily | 🟣 Experimental | Upstream GnRH stimulator. More physiologic alternative to Gonadorelin for HPG-axis maintenance during TRT. |
The sequencing matters. Do not stack all of these on day one. The corpus pattern: get TRT base stable (Weeks 1–4), then test the supporting axes (Week 4 labs), then layer only what the labs justify in Weeks 5–10.
Labs that decide the stack
- Free T3, Free T4, Reverse T3, TSH — full panel, not just TSH. TSH alone misses the conversion problem entirely. If free T3 is low-normal and rT3 is elevated, you have a shunting problem regardless of what TSH says.
- Estradiol — sensitive (LC/MS-MS) assay only. Standard E2 assays are unreliable in men. Target 20–30 pg/mL in proportion to total T.
- DHEA-S, Pregnenolone, Cortisol (4-point salivary or DUTCH) — single morning serum cortisol misses the diurnal curve where the actual dysfunction lives.
- SHBG — drives free vs total T. Don't chase total T numbers; chase free T and SHBG balance.
What's NOT happening yet
- Your E2 is not "estrogen dominance" just because it's above the lab reference range. The corpus is direct: many lab "normal" ranges for E2 on TRT (e.g. 30–45) are wrong because they don't reflect what men actually need for joint, bone, and cognitive protection.
- You are not "adrenally fatigued" in the burned-out-glands sense. HPA axis dysfunction — dysregulated signaling, blunted diurnal cortisol curve — is the real mechanism. The glands work; the signaling is off.
- Adding T3 will not fix a cortisol problem. The corpus is explicit: adrenal status must be assessed before or alongside thyroid replacement, because inadequate cortisol secretion interferes with thyroid hormone action at the cellular level. Fix cortisol signaling first, or in parallel — never thyroid alone if both are off.
- Pregnenolone and DHEA are not "anti-aging stacks" you bolt on for vibes. They're substrate restoration. If your DHEA-S is mid-range for your age, you don't need them. If it's bottom-decile and you're stressed, you do.
- You will not feel the supporting-axis fixes in 48 hours. T3 titration shows in 2–3 weeks. Pregnenolone/DHEA restoration shows in 4–6 weeks. E2 rebalance shows in 7–14 days but the joint and mood effects lag another 2 weeks.
The corpus describes this triangle. Test the corners. Adjust one at a time.