Peter Attia· MD
and then if you reach the point where you're like I want to use something explicitly for sexual desire in postmenopausal women you can use testosterone like that's an option
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
and then if you reach the point where you're like I want to use something explicitly for sexual desire in postmenopausal women you can use testosterone like that's an option
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and then if you reach the point where you're like I want to use something explicitly for sexual desire in post-menopausal women you can use testosterone like that's an option we didn't talk about who the candidates are and when you would use that the biggest hitters are people who've had olophremes at a young age or early menopause post-menopausal women with distressing low desire
the biggest hitters are people who've had offerectomies at a young age early menopause post-menopausal women with distressing low desire
and they have hypoactive meaning distressing low desire that's clinically diagnosed and I don't see another modifiable Factor that's where in post-menopausal women I might think okay do we need to add androgens right
the long and short of it is we have become much more liberal in our use of testosterone in women uh for any sort of sexual side effects