Andropause

"Low Testosterone Is Real, It's Common, and It's Not Something You Just Have to Accept"

Andropause (often called "male menopause") refers to the gradual decline in testosterone and other androgens that begins as early as the mid-30s, typically dropping 1–2% per year. Unlike the more abrupt hormonal shift in women, andropause is a slow erosion: declining energy, reduced motivation, loss of muscle mass, increased body fat, diminished libido, brain fog, and mood changes that are too often chalked up to "just getting older." But low testosterone is a clinical condition with measurable consequences for metabolic health, cardiovascular function, bone density, and mental well-being. And it is eminently treatable when properly diagnosed. Precision andropause care goes beyond a single total testosterone number; it examines the full hormonal picture (free testosterone, SHBG, LH, FSH, estradiol, and more) and builds a personalized, evidence-based plan to restore vitality, protect long-term health, and help men perform at their best at every age.