CBC elevated

Slates36

New Member
Got blood test done 9 weeks post cycle. Still on TRT 150mgs week. Last cycle was 200 test, 200 Tren a, 200 mast e for 12 weeks and 50mg of anavar the last 6 weeks. Attached my results but basically red blood, white blood, hemoglobin, hematocrit and absolute neutrophilis are slightly elevated. Curious if this could still be from the cycle or something else. And best way to lower it. Ran similar cycles before of Tren and never had bloods like this. Thought about donating blood to help lower
 

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I would donate. To lower the red cells.
As for the higher immune cell count any sickness, allergies inflammation form foods etc?
 
No sickness or allergies and don’t believe I’m really experiencing inflammation from anything. Diets pretty in check. I had just assumed 9 weeks out bloods would have stabilized by now and only have had slightly elevated RBC immediately after Tren cycle, not all these other things. Wasn’t sure if these numbers are something I should l be concerned about and bring to a doc or just keep an eye on
 
I would donate. To lower the red cells.
As for the higher immune cell count any sickness, allergies inflammation form foods etc?
Donate is just a temporarily solution. If long time hema 56+ more bloodlettings are adviced.
Also more mounten people and Inuits have a higher Hema than we
 
Got blood test done 9 weeks post cycle. Still on TRT 150mgs week. Last cycle was 200 test, 200 Tren a, 200 mast e for 12 weeks and 50mg of anavar the last 6 weeks. Attached my results but basically red blood, white blood, hemoglobin, hematocrit and absolute neutrophilis are slightly elevated. Curious if this could still be from the cycle or something else. And best way to lower it. Ran similar cycles before of Tren and never had bloods like this. Thought about donating blood to help lower
How much water did you drink in the hours before your bllood draw?

Also read this and do the things it says to do as a new member

 
How much water did you drink in the hours before your bllood draw?

Also read this and do the things it says to do as a new member


Most of the time dehydration is it.
 
Donate is just a temporarily solution. If long time hema 56+ more bloodlettings are adviced.
Also more mounten people and Inuits have a higher Hema than we
Are you saying the groups you mentioned tend to live longer then the average person? As it appears male Inuits. tend to only live to about age 70 on the average.
And the life of a RBC is 120 days so many would be left at 9 weeks along with what has been made since on TRT. The long term solution would be to not do cycles and keep TRT to where RBC stayed in range. I choose donating myself instead.
Just giving advice form my experience as to what i did/do for over 25 years of donation with no down side. More donations just mean more people i can help along with myself so it is a win win for me. But the studies i have seen show that people with high iron levels/RBC tend to live shorter lifespan then the average last i checked. So i go by what is best for longevity. Others can feel free to do what is in their comfort zone as i do not care what others do. Just what is likely to be the healthiest thing for me.
 
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Are you saying the groups you mentioned tend to live longer then the average person? As it appears male Inuits. tend to only live to about age 70 on the average.
And the life of a RBC is 120 days so many would be left at 9 weeks along with what has been made since on TRT. The long term solution would be to not do cycles and keep TRT to where RBC stayed in range. I choose donating myself instead.
Just giving advice form my experience as to what i did/do for over 25 years of donation with no down side. More donations just mean more people i can help along with myself so it is a win win for me. But the studies i have seen show that people with high iron levels/RBC tend to live shorter lifespan then the average last i checked. So i go by what is best for longevity. Others can feel free to do what is in their comfort zone as i do not care what others do. Just what is likely to be the healthiest thing for me.
One Measurement does not mean you are high range.(risk)When you drink a liter water before, you get another result.

Long time blood donation is fine what you do.

If more measurements are high like 56+, you need to do something about it, like multiple bloodlettings. And keep your iron and ferritin in range
 
Are you saying the groups you mentioned tend to live longer then the average person? As it appears male Inuits. tend to only live to about age 70 on the average.
And the life of a RBC is 120 days so many would be left at 9 weeks along with what has been made since on TRT. The long term solution would be to not do cycles and keep TRT to where RBC stayed in range. I choose donating myself instead.
Just giving advice form my experience as to what i did/do for over 25 years of donation with no down side. More donations just mean more people i can help along with myself so it is a win win for me. But the studies i have seen show that people with high iron levels/RBC tend to live shorter lifespan then the average last i checked. So i go by what is best for longevity. Others can feel free to do what is in their comfort zone as i do not care what others do. Just what is likely to be the healthiest thing for me.
Also about a billion studies clearly stating how high HCT wrecks your arteries.
 
One Measurement does not mean you are high range.(risk)When you drink a liter water before, you get another result.

Long time blood donation is fine what you do.

If more measurements are high like 56+, you need to do something about it, like multiple bloodlettings. And keep your iron and ferritin in range
You are entitled to your opinion .
I never mentioned one measurement. I wrote me always donating when higher levels are hit. Damage accrews overtime from even short term things. When added together in the long run longevity goes down.

Countless studies show something else when it comes to longevity. . I always go with the best science i can find at the time. Others should do as they please.
 
High RBC and high iron are often correlated. And even high normal iron levels can not be optimal for longevity.


 
You are entitled to your opinion .
I never mentioned one measurement. I wrote me always donating when higher levels are hit. Damage accrews overtime from even short term things. When added together in the long run longevity goes down.

Countless studies show something else when it comes to longevity. . I always go with the best science i can find at the time. Others should do as they please.
I did, and as far as i know, this is his first bloodwork with light increased Hema
 
I did, and as far as i know, this is his first bloodwork with light increased Hema
A slight increase in less then healthy is still less then optimal health. Unless he plans on never doing another cycle and keeps the TRT low enough to control iron/RBC the advice i gave would be useful at other times as well. Having blood work even 1 day would imply that it had been high for likely weeks at least. And could take weeks to even months to get to a healthy range naturally considering the life expectancy of RBC..
 
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