Clearly, something is up with your hormonal levels. Whether that was caused by the Celestone injection or some other factor is beyond our ability to determine, and it's likely that you'll get more informed opinions from an endocrinologist who can support his or her opinions with laboratory testing.
That said, it sounds like you've had a recent and thus far brief encounter with gynecomastia, and my recommendation would be to wait at least six months to allow for the condition to resolve with or without hormone management, based on the recommendations of an endocrinologist. You may need surgery in the end, but rushing to that without determining the cause could leave you with a recurrence unnecessarily.
Good luck,
Rick Silverman
Thanks, doctor. Yes, as much pain as I'm experiencing right now, I wouldn't even think of having gynecomastia surgery now. Even if I didn't know that doctors advise NOT having surgery until the active phase of gyne has ceased, simple common sense should tell people that having surgery would not be in their best interest when their breasts are at the height of feeling inflamed and painful. Cutting into them at such a time just makes no sense until the condition stabilizes. My problem is.....at this point, there seems to be no indication of there ever being a let up in the condition. My whole chest is hurting and I am even feeling discomfort/swelling under my armpits. I don't know what's going on, but it doesn't sound like everyday gynecomastia. I haven't heard anyone else describe their gynecomastia in this manner....where pain and swelling are the main complaints. My left breast feels inflamed and when I simply walk around, it feels like i have a golf ball under my skin.
I did get my hormone tests back and my total T was 230, which is low. Unfortunately, my doctor did not measure my free T, and from what I've read, that's the most important one of all.
My estrogen level was just barely within the normal range. If it had been 3 points higher, it would have been in the high range. But my doctor just looked at it as no red flag, since it was technically within the normal range. I'm not a doctor, but to me, that doesn't make sense to just disregard the finding because it's in the normal range.
Just as ratios are important in cholesterol lab readings, I think ratios between your estrogen and T are probably important, too. I've got low T and high-normal estrogen. To me, THAT'S significant. My LH and FLH are also within the normal range, but toward the low end.
Everything I've read suggests these findings should point to ruling out a pituitary tumor. But my doctor only said all my hormone levels were normal except the T. He wants to put me on Androgel if my next blood test shows the T to be low. And that's apparently it. He says my "slightly low" T is NOT the cause of my gynecomastia. I don't know why he thinks that, when the literature I've read says it COULD be the cause.
I feel like I need to go to an endocrinologist and I feel like I need to have an MRI of my brain to rule out the pituitary tumor. I also would like some more blood work to look at other hormone levels which have not been checked. My cortisol level has not been checked, and I would like to have my liver and kidney functioning looked at.
I really don't understand why, if estogen is too high and T is too low, the typical treatment is simply to put a man on T gel. I know it's important to supplement the T if it's low, but it would also make sense to try to lower the estrogen. No one ever seems to go that route. Everything I read, they just focus on increasing the T. And much of the time, it doesn't seem to benefit the person. So if there's no noticeable benefit from it, why use it? Especially when the side effects can be exceptionally bad (shrinking testes, stops sperm production).
I know there are medications for lowering estrogen, the main one being Tamoxifen. But other powerful meds for this are Letrozole and Anastrozole. You don't see these mentioned much, and I really don't understand why. I know a lot of doctors simply don't know about them. If meds are used in ways which are not in the PDR, they seem to freak out. When I brought up Tamoxifen to my doctor when I first thought I gynecomastia, you would have thought I told him I was a space alien. He just looked at me like I was crazy for even suggesting such a thing, when the literature is full of using Tamoxifen to ward off early gynecomastia.
Can you take medicines to increase T and lower estrogen at the same time? In other words, would it be ok to take Tamoxifen and/or Letrozole while also using the Androgel? I just never see this.....it's only the T gel that doctors use. They don't seem concerned about lowering estrogen.
To me, it would make sense to address both problems. Lowering the estrogen should definitely take care of the gynecomastia. But most doctors only focus on the T gel. And ironically, the T gel can CAUSE gynecomastia. Great.....
It's one big puzzle that no one seems to know the answers to. It's amazing to think that in this day and age, medicine just doesn't seem to know much about hormone-related disorders. We really don't know what the optimal T level should be for men across a variety of age ranges. We really don't know what giving T long term will do to the body. It's disconcerting when even the doctors are pretty much guessing, too.
I really wish I could get a handle on what all is going on with me. It's stressful to feel sick, and not knowing why or for how long I'm going to feel bad makes it even more stressful. Everything moves at a snail's pace and it's hard when you are in pain and want answers RIGHT NOW! Waiting for blood tests, getting referred to new doctors, getting more tests under THAT doctor, and waiting for those results....it's just a never-ending process.