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Lab Literacy

What to Ask Your Doctor About Your Hormone Labs (And How to Ask It)

Most men walk into hormone lab conversations unprepared — and walk out with incomplete answers.

Michael Peters, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ManopauseMD.com · Stanford University School of Medicine · Retired from active practice

Published March 24, 2026

TL;DR

  • Standard blood panels frequently omit testosterone — and when included, it is usually total testosterone only, drawn at the wrong time of day.
  • Clinical guidelines require two separate early-morning testosterone measurements before any diagnosis of deficiency.
  • Free testosterone and SHBG reveal how much testosterone is actually available to your tissues — total T alone does not.
  • LH and FSH tell you whether the problem originates in the testes or in the brain's signaling — a distinction that shapes everything downstream.
  • The goal is not to walk in with a conclusion. It is to walk in as an informed participant who can have a real conversation.

Most men who suspect something is off hormonally do one of two things.

They Google their symptoms, convince themselves of a diagnosis, and walk into their physician's office with a conclusion already formed. Or they say nothing specific at all — they mention fatigue, or that they've been feeling off — and leave the appointment with a general blood panel and a follow-up in six months.

Neither approach serves you well.

The first puts the physician on the defensive. The second produces data that doesn't answer the question you actually have.

There is a third way. It requires knowing what tests are worth asking for, why each one matters, and how to frame the conversation so your physician understands what you're trying to understand — not what you're trying to demand.

That's what this article is about.

Why the Standard Blood Panel Usually Misses It

When a physician orders a "general blood panel" or "routine labs," testosterone is frequently not included — and when it is, it is typically total testosterone only, drawn at whatever time of day the appointment happens to fall.1

This matters for several reasons covered in earlier articles in this series, but worth restating here plainly: total testosterone alone, drawn at a random time of day, is a limited data point. It does not tell you your free testosterone — the biologically active fraction your tissues can actually use. It does not tell you your SHBG — the protein that binds testosterone and determines how much of it is available. It does not tell you whether a low result reflects a problem at the level of the testes or a signaling problem from the brain. And if it was drawn in the afternoon, it may be reflecting normal diurnal variation rather than a genuine deficit.1

The standard panel was not designed to answer the question you're asking. Which is why you need to ask for something more specific.

The Baseline Hormonal Workup Worth Requesting

The following reflects what current clinical guidelines from the American Urological Association and the Endocrine Society identify as the appropriate minimum workup for men presenting with symptoms consistent with testosterone deficiency.1 2 This is not a prescription. It is a description of guideline-supported clinical practice — information you can use to have a more informed conversation with your physician.

Two early-morning total testosterone measurements, on separate days.

This is the single most important structural point in the entire workup. Clinical guidelines from both the AUA and the Endocrine Society specify that a diagnosis of testosterone deficiency should not be made on the basis of a single measurement.1 2 Testosterone levels vary day to day and are subject to acute influences including stress, illness, and sleep quality. Two separate early-morning measurements — drawn between approximately 7 and 10am, when testosterone peaks — provide the reliability that a single result cannot.

If your physician orders one testosterone test at 2pm and flags the result as normal, you now know why that result deserves more scrutiny.

Free testosterone and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG).

SHBG is a protein produced primarily by the liver that binds tightly to testosterone, rendering the bound portion biologically unavailable. Only the unbound fraction — free testosterone — can enter cells and exert hormonal effects.3

SHBG levels tend to rise with age, meaning that even when total testosterone remains stable, the biologically active free fraction may be declining.4 Two men with identical total testosterone of 450 ng/dL can have very different free testosterone levels if one has elevated SHBG. The man with high SHBG may be experiencing functional testosterone deficiency even though his total number looks unremarkable.

Guidelines recommend measuring free testosterone — either directly or calculated from total testosterone and SHBG — when total testosterone is near the lower limit of normal or when SHBG-altering conditions are present, including obesity, liver disease, thyroid dysfunction, or aging itself.1

LH and FSH.

Luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) are pituitary hormones that regulate testosterone production. Measuring them alongside testosterone tells a critically important part of the story: where the problem originates.

In primary hypogonadism — where the testes themselves are underproducing — LH and FSH will be elevated, because the pituitary is signaling harder to compensate for insufficient testicular output.2 In secondary hypogonadism — where the problem is insufficient signaling from the hypothalamus or pituitary — LH and FSH will be low or inappropriately normal despite low testosterone.2

This distinction is not academic. It shapes the clinical picture, informs the likely causes, and is relevant to any treatment conversation that follows. A physician who orders testosterone only — without LH and FSH — is working with an incomplete map.

CBC and hematocrit.

A complete blood count including hematocrit provides baseline metabolic context and is relevant to any future clinical decision-making around testosterone. Elevated hematocrit is among the contraindications to initiating testosterone therapy, making baseline measurement important.1

Thyroid function, if not recently tested.

Thyroid dysfunction — both hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism — can produce symptoms that overlap significantly with testosterone deficiency: fatigue, cognitive slowing, mood changes, body composition shifts.5 If thyroid function has not been evaluated recently and symptoms are present, it is a legitimate variable to rule out before attributing everything to the hormonal picture.

Sleep evaluation, if symptoms warrant.

As covered in a previous article in this series, obstructive sleep apnea is significantly more prevalent in midlife men and is independently associated with testosterone suppression.6 The Endocrine Society explicitly lists untreated severe OSA as a contraindication to initiating testosterone therapy.1 If you are experiencing non-restorative sleep, daytime fatigue, or have been told you stop breathing during sleep, raising this with your physician before or alongside the hormonal workup is not optional — it is clinically relevant.

How to Have the Conversation

The language you use matters. The goal is not to walk in demanding a specific panel. The goal is to walk in as an informed participant who can have a real conversation.

Here are specific phrases that communicate what you're looking for without putting your physician on the defensive:

On the two-measurement standard:
"I've read that clinical guidelines recommend two early-morning testosterone measurements before drawing conclusions. Can we structure the testing that way?"

On free testosterone and SHBG:
"I understand total testosterone doesn't tell the whole story — is it worth also looking at free testosterone and SHBG, given my age and symptoms?"

On LH and FSH:
"If my testosterone does come back low, would it be helpful to know whether the issue is at the level of the testes or the signaling from the brain? Can we add LH and FSH to the panel?"

On thyroid:
"Has my thyroid been checked recently? Some of my symptoms overlap with thyroid dysfunction and I want to make sure we're ruling that out."

On sleep:
"I've been reading that sleep apnea can suppress testosterone and mimic low-T symptoms. Given my sleep quality, is it worth screening for that as part of this workup?"

These are not aggressive questions. A physician who is engaged and attentive will welcome them. If the response is dismissal without explanation, that is useful information about whether this is the right clinical relationship for this conversation.

What to Do With the Results

Getting the labs is the beginning, not the end.

A result requires context to mean anything. A total testosterone of 320 ng/dL in a man who previously ran at 750 is a different clinical picture than the same number in a man who has tested consistently in that range for years. A low free testosterone with elevated SHBG tells a different story than low free testosterone with normal SHBG. An LH that is elevated alongside low total testosterone suggests a different mechanism than an LH that is low or inappropriately normal.

This is why the conversation with a physician who knows your history is not replaceable by a lab printout — or by an article. The data is the starting point for a conversation. Not the conclusion of one.

What changes with good lab literacy is the quality of that conversation. You arrive with specific numbers, an understanding of what they mean and what they don't, and questions that help your physician give you the most useful picture possible.

That is the goal of everything published at ManopauseMD. Not to replace your physician. To make you the most prepared patient in the room.

The free ManopauseMD guide walks through the full lab picture — the five symptom pillars, the workup worth asking for, and the science behind what each number means in context.

A practical note on access. In most US states, consumer lab services allow you to order your own bloodwork directly without a physician referral. The Estradiol, FSH, SHBG, and Testosterone Free and Total panel through our Ulta Lab Tests partner page covers exactly the workup described in this article — free testosterone, total testosterone, SHBG, FSH, and estradiol in a single draw. It is not a replacement for clinical interpretation. It is a way to walk into your next appointment with your own data already in hand.

Lab Panel

Estradiol, FSH, SHBG, Testosterone Free and Total → UltaLabTests.com/ManopauseMD →

ManopauseMD may receive compensation through this link. We only list services our CMO has reviewed for accuracy, transparency, and appropriate clinical framing. Getting labs is not a substitute for working with your physician — it's a way to walk in better prepared.

Sources

  1. Mulhall JP, et al. Evaluation and Management of Testosterone Deficiency: AUA Guideline. Journal of Urology. 2018;200(2):423–432.
  2. Bhasin S, et al. Testosterone Therapy in Men With Hypogonadism: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 2018;103(5):1715–1744.
  3. Rosner W, et al. Position statement: Utility, limitations, and pitfalls in measuring testosterone: an Endocrine Society position statement. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 2007;92(2):405–413.
  4. Harman SM, et al. Longitudinal effects of aging on serum total and free testosterone levels in healthy men. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 2001;86(2):724–731. [Massachusetts Male Aging Study]
  5. Bhasin S, et al. (see source 2) — differential diagnosis section.
  6. Luboshitzky R, et al. Disrupted testosterone secretion and sleep fragmentation in men with obstructive sleep apnea. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 2002;87(1):219–224.

This content is strictly educational and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation. Dr. Michael Peters is a retired physician and does not practice medicine in this capacity. Nothing on this site, in any guide, or in any email should be used as a substitute for a qualified healthcare provider who knows your personal health history. Always consult a licensed healthcare professional before making any changes to your health regimen.

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