BloodTrack for TRT & Hormone Therapy Patients

Monitor Your TRT Journey with Precision

Track testosterone, estrogen, and key health markers to optimize your hormone replacement therapy.

Sound Familiar?

These are common challenges that proper blood test tracking can help you overcome.

1

Difficulty tracking multiple hormone levels over time

2

Unclear correlation between dosing and blood levels

3

Managing estrogen and other secondary markers

4

Monitoring hematocrit for safety

5

Keeping organized records for doctor appointments

Built for TRT & Hormone Therapy Patients

BloodTrack provides specialized features designed for your specific health needs.

Injection Tracking

Log your injections and correlate with blood levels.

Symptom Journal

Track energy, mood, and libido alongside your labs.

TRT-Specific Analysis

Optimized reference ranges for men on hormone therapy.

Why Track Your Blood Tests?

Spot trends early

Catch negative changes before they become problems.

Measure interventions

See how diet, exercise, and supplements affect your markers.

Optimize treatment

Share clear data with your healthcare provider for better decisions.

Take control

Transform confusing lab results into actionable insights.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about blood testing for trt & hormone therapy patients.

How often should I get blood work on TRT?

Initially, test every 6-8 weeks until levels stabilize. Once dialed in, most protocols recommend testing every 3-6 months, or whenever making dosage adjustments.

When should I test relative to my injection?

For trough levels (most common), test the morning before your next injection. For peak levels, test 24-48 hours after injection. Consistency is key - always test at the same point in your cycle.

What hematocrit level is concerning on TRT?

Most guidelines suggest keeping hematocrit below 54%. Levels above this may require intervention such as blood donation, dose adjustment, or more frequent smaller injections.

Why monitor estradiol on TRT?

Testosterone converts to estradiol via aromatization. Too high can cause water retention, mood issues, and gynecomastia. Too low causes joint pain and low libido. Optimal balance is individual.

Track Your TRT Journey

Join thousands of users who track their blood markers with BloodTrack. Upload your results in seconds and get insights that matter.