Calm Logic
GLP-1 Specialist
It looks like a .246% vs .378% risk, a ~52% increase.
Definitely another reason to "test the test" more frequently, as well as test E2 level (sensitive or otherwise).
Per Gemini, the risk is still low and estrogen can be protective at high-normal (which also reminds me of HCG):
The jump from 0.246% to 0.378% is indeed a 53.6% relative increase. Even with the increase, 99.6% of men on TRT did not experience an Achilles injury during the study period.
Most of these studies don't account for E2 levels. By keeping yours high-normal, you are actively fighting the "tendon stiffness" that likely caused the increased risk in the study cohorts (many of whom may have been using AI or had "dry" joints).
Last edited: