Bloodwork Stats/levels

BellaMasculine

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Which ones are most important in my opinion (german, just use translator pls):

  1. GOT
  2. GPT
  3. GGT
  4. Bilirubin
  5. Kreatinin
  6. Harnsäure
  7. Harnstoff
  8. GFR
  9. HDL
  10. LDL
  11. Triglyzeride
  12. Gesamtcholesterin
  13. CRP
  14. DHEA - S
  15. Hämatokrit
  16. Vitamin D
  17. TSH
  18. T3
  19. T4
  20. FSH /LH
  21. Testosteron
  22. Östrogen
  23. Cystatin c
  24. Prolaktin
  25. hba1c
  26. Blutzucker
  27. Shbg
  28. Myostatin
  29. Kbb+Gbb+diff

When doing blood work:
  • All 4-6 weeks is good or at least every 2 months.
  • In the morning on empty stomach
  • no cardio before
  • no supplements, peds , ... before
If you want to test HGH levels:
  • Take 10UI HGH intramuscular 1,5 - 2hrs BEFORE the bloodwork is getting done
  • on empty stomach
  • no cardio before
  • no supplements, peds, .. before
Also please don´t take blood levels of your testosterone level when your last injection was nearly one week ago ... levels won´t be correct then.
 
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When doing blood work:
  • All 4-6 weeks is good or at least every 2 months.
  • In the morning on empty stomach
  • no cardio before
  • no supplements, peds , ... before
Another useful suggestion that I live by is drinking atleast 2L of water before getting my blood drawn
 
Another useful suggestion that I live by is drinking atleast 2L of water before getting my blood drawn
2L isn't necessary but a glass of water - 1L is good yeah.

This is the first time I see that you can do a blood test for Myostatin.
It is if you ask for and the doc/lab is offering it, no additional costs for me in that case.
I would add to this list a blood test for homocystein
Not necessary for me, like Myostatin , it's a nice to have but not a must
 
These are mine Parameters, I think you have to many, so your tests become uneccessary expensive.

Blood Tests & Monitoring

Before Cycle Start (Baseline):

  • CBC, CMP, lipids, PSA, hormones (testosterone, LH, FSH, SHBG, estradiol, DHT, prolactin, cortisol)
  • Thyroid panel (TSH, free T3, free T4)
  • Insulin, fasting blood glucose, HbA1c
  • CRP

During the Cycle (every 8–12 weeks):
  • Testosterone, estradiol, DHT, SHBG, PSA, hematocrit, lipid profile, liver enzymes, blood pressure, fasting blood glucose

Post-Cycle & After PCT:
  • LH, FSH, testosterone, estradiol, SHBG, PSA, prolactin, DHT, hematocrit, lipid profile, liver enzymes, thyroid panel, HbA1c, CRP
 
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2L isn't necessary but a glass of water - 1L is good yeah.


It is if you ask for and the doc/lab is offering it, no additional costs for me in that case.

Not necessary for me, like Myostatin , it's a nice to have but not a must
Honestly, even a single liter of water can noticeably lower your hematocrit — it drops.

Back in the day, before I knew how dangerous high hematocrit levels could be, I ran a cycle with a good amount of boldenone and pushed my hematocrit all the way up to 60%. When I was told my blood was basically the consistency of sour cream, I freaked out and started drinking a ton of water. I had about three liters that evening, and by the next morning, my hematocrit had dropped to 57%
 
These are mine Parameters, I think you have to many, so your tests become uneccessary expensive.

Blood Tests & Monitoring

Before Cycle Start (Baseline):

  • CBC, CMP, lipids, PSA, hormones (testosterone, LH, FSH, SHBG, estradiol, DHT, prolactin, cortisol)
  • Thyroid panel (TSH, free T3, free T4)
  • Insulin, fasting blood glucose, HbA1c
  • CRP

During the Cycle (every 8–12 weeks):
  • Testosterone, estradiol, DHT, SHBG, PSA, hematocrit, lipid profile, liver enzymes, blood pressure, fasting blood glucose

Post-Cycle & After PCT:
  • LH, FSH, testosterone, estradiol, SHBG, PSA, prolactin, DHT, hematocrit, lipid profile, liver enzymes, thyroid panel, HbA1c, CRP
Getting a blood test for cortisol is often pointless because levels fluctuate heavily throughout the day and are influenced by tons of variables — sleep, stress, food, even how you got to the lab. The only meaningful way to assess cortisol is through salivary tests taken at multiple times (like morning and evening) or stimulated stress tests under medical supervision. A single blood draw gives limited info and can easily be misleading.
 
Honestly, even a single liter of water can noticeably lower your hematocrit — it drops.

Back in the day, before I knew how dangerous high hematocrit levels could be, I ran a cycle with a good amount of boldenone and pushed my hematocrit all the way up to 60%. When I was told my blood was basically the consistency of sour cream, I freaked out and started drinking a ton of water. I had about three liters that evening, and by the next morning, my hematocrit had dropped to 57%
For me there was never a difference between 1L, 2L or even nothing tbh and I do bloods all 4-6 weeks
 
For me there was never a difference between 1L, 2L or even nothing tbh and I do bloods all 4-6 weeks
If your hematocrit is 54% (like mine), drinking 1–2 liters of water before a blood test can temporarily lower it by 2–6 points — down to around 48–52%. This happens due to hemodilution, meaning the plasma volume increases and "dilutes" the red blood cells.

Hematocrit is the percentage of red blood cells (RBCs) in total blood volume. If it’s 54%, that means 54 ml of RBCs per 100 ml of blood.

Let’s say you weigh 100 kg (like mine) → around 7 liters of blood:
(RBCs: 3.78 L and Plasma: 3.22 L)

Scenario 1 — you drink 1 L of water and it all enters your bloodstream:
Plasma = 4.22 L
New HCT = 3.78 / (3.78 + 4.22) ≈ 47.25%

Scenario 2 — you drink 2 L:
Plasma = 5.22 L
New HCT ≈ 42% — although in reality that’s unlikely, since not all the water ends up in circulation immediately.

Of course, this is theoretical. In practice, your body regulates fluids more dynamically, so the drop may be less dramatic.
From my personal experience - when I didn’t drink anything before bloodwork — not even a glass of water in the morning — my hematocrit consistently came out higher.
 
If your hematocrit is 54% (like mine), drinking 1–2 liters of water before a blood test can temporarily lower it by 2–6 points — down to around 48–52%. This happens due to hemodilution, meaning the plasma volume increases and "dilutes" the red blood cells.

Hematocrit is the percentage of red blood cells (RBCs) in total blood volume. If it’s 54%, that means 54 ml of RBCs per 100 ml of blood.

Let’s say you weigh 100 kg (like mine) → around 7 liters of blood:
(RBCs: 3.78 L and Plasma: 3.22 L)

Scenario 1 — you drink 1 L of water and it all enters your bloodstream:
Plasma = 4.22 L
New HCT = 3.78 / (3.78 + 4.22) ≈ 47.25%

Scenario 2 — you drink 2 L:
Plasma = 5.22 L
New HCT ≈ 42% — although in reality that’s unlikely, since not all the water ends up in circulation immediately.

Of course, this is theoretical. In practice, your body regulates fluids more dynamically, so the drop may be less dramatic.
From my personal experience - when I didn’t drink anything before bloodwork — not even a glass of water in the morning — my hematocrit consistently came out higher.



For me there was never a difference between 1L, 2L or even nothing tbh and I do bloods all 4-6 weeks
 
Getting a blood test for cortisol is often pointless because levels fluctuate heavily throughout the day and are influenced by tons of variables — sleep, stress, food, even how you got to the lab. The only meaningful way to assess cortisol is through salivary tests taken at multiple times (like morning and evening) or stimulated stress tests under medical supervision. A single blood draw gives limited info and can easily be misleading.
Yeah could be, but I run fine on testing it, especially using HGH ... mine are pretty stable.

In the end it was just a heads up on the opener of the post, that he might get to many markers... as here in Germany we pay per marker ...
 
If we could do an experiment – before and after – then we’d actually be able to determine if there’s a difference. Everything else is just our assumptions. I’ve just outlined how it should work in theory
 
Yeah could be, but I run fine on testing it, especially using HGH ... mine are pretty stable.

In the end it was just a heads up on the opener of the post, that he might get to many markers... as here in Germany we pay per marker ...
This is what I do: every 6–8 months, I get a fairly extensive blood panel done. Then, every 6 weeks, I do only the tests that I typically need to adjust and that are the most important. Occasionally, I add a rare marker for experimentation purposes.
 
This is what I do: every 6–8 months, I get a fairly extensive blood panel done. Then, every 6 weeks, I do only the tests that I typically need to adjust and that are the most important. Occasionally, I add a rare marker for experimentation purposes.
Have you posted your bloodwork somewhere ? couldn't find it ...
 
I would say that the first things to keep an eye on are the kidneys and the heart, these are the two organs most at risk... obviously also a cholesterol and triglyceride control which goes hand in hand
 
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