Male andropause refers to the symptoms that can accompany a gradual decline in testosterone with age — fatigue, low libido, low mood, reduced muscle mass and poor concentration. Unlike menopause, the change is gradual, and not every man is affected.
Male andropause refers to the symptoms that can accompany a gradual decline in testosterone with age — fatigue, low libido, low mood, reduced muscle mass and poor concentration. Unlike menopause, the change is gradual, and not every man is affected.
Male andropause refers to the symptoms that can accompany a gradual decline in testosterone with age — fatigue, low libido, low mood, reduced muscle mass and poor concentration. Unlike menopause, the change is gradual, and not every man is affected.
Where symptoms and blood tests point to genuinely low testosterone, treatment can help. The key is to confirm the diagnosis with testing rather than treat on symptoms alone.
If several of these apply to you, a urological evaluation is worthwhile. This checklist is a guide, not a diagnosis.
A structured review of energy, mood, libido and physical changes.
A blood test measures testosterone (ideally in the morning) and related hormones.
We check for conditions such as diabetes and thyroid problems that mimic or worsen symptoms.
Results are interpreted alongside symptoms, not in isolation.
Treatment follows only when symptoms and low testosterone are both confirmed.
Where indicated, testosterone treatment (for example, injections) is given with monitoring.
Weight, sleep and exercise changes can meaningfully raise testosterone and energy.
Treatment is monitored for effect and safety over time.
Andropause is diagnosed with proper testing here rather than treated on symptoms alone, and therapy is monitored for safety, by a board-certified urologist. Confirmed testosterone testing (a listed service) and English-speaking support make the assessment clear for foreign patients.
Testosterone does decline gradually with age, and some men develop genuine symptoms from low levels. The key is confirming it with a blood test rather than assuming.
With a symptom review and a blood test for testosterone (ideally morning) and related hormones, interpreted in context.
When genuinely indicated and monitored, it can help. We confirm the diagnosis first and monitor treatment for effect and safety.
Yes — weight loss, better sleep and exercise can raise testosterone and energy, and are part of the plan.