My GP was convinced I had hormone problems because og my gyno but when I went to the endo she took one look at me and said "There is absolutely nothing wrong with your hormones and the blood test will show nothing"
And she was right. I think unless you look like you have Klinefelters (sp?) in which case they need to work out what medicine to give you, then a blood test wont reveal much.
I am a simple layman, but I have seen a number of Endocrinologists and a world leading Andrologist; that experience has led me to ALWAYS recommend a full hormone profile be done first on any person considering surgery for gyne. I accept that if you have had gyne since puberty with no re-growth and excellent general health, it will
probably show that your hormones are back in balance. However ask yourself this simple question .....
are you as a patient prepared to risk the boobs growing again after surgery and having to go through the whole process again? If the answer is "yes" then good luck with your gamble.
In these days of screening and preventative medicine, for the few pounds it costs to run such a test, I strongly believe it is money well spent. A simple blood test to check how your Endocrine system is working could reveal any underlying issues from a number of cancers (pituitary, adrenal, liver, prostate etc), low levels of testosterone, thyroid issues etc etc.
In short, that simple blood test is a damn good health check up, and gives peace of mind that if you elect for surgery, the boobs shouldn’t re-grow.I am
VERY sceptical of NHS doctors/endos who
take one look at a patient and say "There is absolutely nothing wrong with your hormones and the blood test will show nothing". I seriously wonder if their first thought is on the cost rather than the patient’s health. Call me an old cynic, but after battling with the NHS for 3 years (once over £52 my GP
wouldn’t spend on a
one off drug a Professor of Endocrinology recommended) life has made me this way.
My layman’s opinion is that a patient should insist on the blood test. You pay your taxes which makes you a customer as well as a patient. You are paying the doctors wages after all. Point out the benefits of the health screening it provides and the reassurance that you (or the NHS) won’t have to spend further money on a second or third surgery. The doctor or Endo already know this, they sometimes have to be told that
YOU know this too.
It's a cliché I know .. but information is power.