Feeling tired all the time? Struggling to build muscle no matter how hard you train? Noticing a drop in your sex drive, your sharpness, or your motivation? These are not just signs of “getting older” — they may be symptoms of low testosterone, a condition that affects millions of men and is consistently undertreated.
At Multigen Wellness, we work with men every day who spent years thinking something was just “off” — only to discover that their testosterone levels were well below the optimal range. The good news? Once identified, low testosterone is highly treatable. This guide will help you recognize the signs, understand what causes low T, and show you exactly what to do next.
What Is Testosterone and Why Does It Matter?
Testosterone is the primary male sex hormone, though women also produce it in smaller amounts. In men, it is produced mainly in the testes and plays a central role in nearly every system of the body. It regulates energy levels, muscle mass, bone density, fat distribution, mood, libido, cognitive function, and red blood cell production.
Testosterone levels naturally peak in your late teens and early twenties, then begin a gradual decline of roughly 1–2% per year after age 30. However, many men experience a sharper or earlier decline due to lifestyle factors, chronic illness, stress, or other hormonal imbalances — and this is where symptoms begin to emerge.
The Most Common Signs of Low Testosterone
Low testosterone (clinically known as hypogonadism or testosterone deficiency) does not look the same in every man. Some experience a dramatic shift; others notice a slow, creeping decline they write off as stress or aging. Here are the most telling signs:
1. Chronic Fatigue and Low Energy
One of the earliest and most common complaints is a persistent sense of fatigue that does not improve with sleep. Men with low T often describe waking up exhausted, struggling to get through the afternoon, or lacking the drive to do things they used to enjoy. This is not ordinary tiredness — it is a bone-deep depletion that affects every area of daily life.
2. Decreased Sex Drive (Low Libido)
Testosterone is the primary driver of sexual desire in men. When levels fall, libido often drops noticeably. Men may find themselves disinterested in sex, less aroused by stimuli they once found exciting, or simply unable to initiate intimacy the way they used to. This can put serious strain on relationships and self-esteem.
3. Erectile Dysfunction
While erectile dysfunction (ED) has multiple causes, low testosterone is a significant contributing factor. Testosterone supports the release of nitric oxide in the body, which is essential for achieving and maintaining erections. Men with low T may notice weaker erections, fewer spontaneous erections, or difficulty maintaining firmness.
4. Loss of Muscle Mass and Strength
Testosterone is anabolic — it drives muscle protein synthesis. When testosterone is low, men often find it increasingly difficult to maintain muscle mass even with regular exercise. They may notice their body composition shifting: less muscle, more fat, even without changing their diet or training habits.
5. Increased Body Fat, Especially Around the Abdomen
Low testosterone and increased body fat have a circular relationship — each makes the other worse. Fat cells contain an enzyme called aromatase, which converts testosterone into estrogen. This means that as body fat increases, testosterone drops further. Men with low T often struggle with stubborn belly fat that does not respond to diet or exercise.
6. Depression, Irritability, and Brain Fog
Testosterone has a profound effect on mood and cognition. Low levels are strongly associated with depression, anxiety, irritability, and a general lack of motivation. Many men describe feeling like a “flat” version of themselves — less engaged, less competitive, less sharp. Cognitive symptoms like difficulty concentrating and memory lapses are also common.
7. Poor Sleep Quality
Testosterone is largely produced during deep, restorative sleep. Low testosterone can disrupt sleep cycles, making it harder to achieve deep sleep — which in turn reduces testosterone production further. Men with low T frequently report insomnia, restless sleep, or feeling unrested no matter how many hours they log.
8. Reduced Bone Density
Testosterone plays an important role in maintaining bone mineral density. Men with chronically low testosterone are at higher risk of osteoporosis and fractures, particularly as they age. This is a less visible symptom but a serious long-term health consequence that should not be ignored.
9. Hair Loss and Changes in Skin
While genetics drive most male pattern baldness, testosterone plays a role in overall hair health. Low T can also cause reduced body and facial hair growth. Some men notice their skin becomes drier or thinner over time as hormone levels decline.
10. Testicular Shrinkage or Infertility
In more pronounced cases of testosterone deficiency, men may notice testicular atrophy (shrinkage) or a decline in sperm quality and fertility. These are signs of more significant hormonal disruption and warrant prompt medical attention.
What Causes Low Testosterone?
Testosterone levels decline for a variety of reasons, and understanding the cause helps guide the most effective treatment approach:
- Age-related decline: The natural 1–2% annual drop in testosterone production after age 30.
- Obesity and poor metabolic health: Excess adipose tissue elevates estrogen and suppresses testosterone.
- Chronic stress: Elevated cortisol actively suppresses testosterone production at the hypothalamic level.
- Poor sleep: Testosterone is primarily produced during sleep; poor sleep quality directly reduces output.
- Nutritional deficiencies: Low zinc, vitamin D, and healthy fat intake can impair testosterone synthesis.
- Overtraining: Excessive exercise without adequate recovery can temporarily suppress testosterone.
- Primary hypogonadism: A testicular issue that reduces production capacity.
- Secondary hypogonadism: A pituitary or hypothalamic issue that reduces the hormonal signal telling the testes to produce testosterone.
- Medications: Certain drugs including opioids, glucocorticoids, and some antidepressants can lower testosterone.
How Is Low Testosterone Diagnosed?
The only definitive way to diagnose low testosterone is through a blood test. A comprehensive hormone panel should measure:
- Total testosterone: The overall amount of testosterone in the blood.
- Free testosterone: The biologically active portion not bound to proteins — often more clinically relevant than total testosterone.
- LH and FSH: Pituitary hormones that reveal whether low T is primary or secondary.
- Estradiol (E2): Elevated estrogen in men is often a direct driver of low T symptoms.
- SHBG (Sex Hormone Binding Globulin): Binds to testosterone and reduces free testosterone availability.
- Prolactin, thyroid panel, and CBC: To rule out other contributing conditions.
It is important to note that “normal” lab ranges are often wide and not optimized for vitality. A testosterone level of 350 ng/dL may be within the “normal” reference range but still leave a man feeling symptomatic. At Multigen Wellness, we evaluate your results in context — looking at where your levels fall relative to optimal function, not just where they fall relative to an average population that includes sedentary, overweight, and elderly men.
What Are Your Treatment Options?
Once low testosterone is confirmed, there are several evidence-based treatment approaches depending on your goals, severity, and whether preserving fertility is a priority.
Testosterone Replacement Therapy (TRT)
TRT is the most direct and effective intervention for clinically low testosterone. It is available in several forms including weekly intramuscular or subcutaneous injections, topical gels and creams, patches, and pellets. At Multigen Wellness, we primarily use injectable testosterone because it offers precise dosing control, predictable absorption, and the best cost-to-effectiveness ratio. TRT is fully customized to your lab values, symptoms, and goals.
Clomiphene (Clomid) or Enclomiphene
For men who want to stimulate their own testosterone production — particularly those concerned about fertility — selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) like clomiphene or enclomiphene can be effective. These medications signal the pituitary to produce more LH and FSH, which in turn tells the testes to produce more testosterone naturally.
HCG (Human Chorionic Gonadotropin) and Gonadorelin
HCG mimics LH and directly stimulates testicular testosterone production. It is often used alongside TRT to maintain testicular size and fertility. Gonadorelin (GnRH) serves a similar purpose by stimulating the pituitary gland in a pulsatile fashion. Both are commonly incorporated into Multigen Wellness treatment protocols.
Lifestyle Optimization
While lifestyle changes alone are rarely sufficient to fully correct clinically low testosterone, they are an important foundation for any treatment program. Resistance training, adequate sleep (7–9 hours), stress management, body fat reduction, and optimizing micronutrient status (zinc, vitamin D, magnesium) can meaningfully support hormonal health and enhance the effectiveness of medical therapy.
Why Most Men Wait Too Long
One of the most frustrating patterns we see at Multigen Wellness is men who have been suffering with low testosterone symptoms for years — sometimes decades — before seeking help. The reasons are understandable: symptoms come on gradually, they are easy to attribute to stress or aging, and there is still a cultural stigma around hormone therapy for men.
But here is the reality: every year spent with suboptimal testosterone is a year of preventable muscle loss, bone density decline, cardiovascular risk accumulation, and reduced quality of life. The research supporting testosterone optimization is robust, and for men with genuine deficiency, the benefits of treatment — improved energy, body composition, mood, sexual function, and metabolic health — are well-documented and profound.
How Multigen Wellness Can Help
Multigen Wellness is an online hormone therapy clinic serving men and women across the United States. Our approach is simple: we use comprehensive hormone testing, individualized protocols, and ongoing medical supervision to help you achieve optimal hormonal health — all from the convenience of your home.
When you work with us, you receive a complete hormone panel, a one-on-one consultation with a licensed provider, a customized treatment plan, and continuous monitoring to ensure your levels and symptoms are optimized over time. You are not a number on a chart — you are a patient with specific goals and unique biology, and we treat you that way.
Ready to Find Out Where Your Testosterone Stands?
If you have been experiencing any of the symptoms described in this article, the smartest next step is to get tested. You owe it to yourself to find out what is actually going on — and to know that effective, evidence-based solutions exist.
Contact Multigen Wellness today at +1 (800) 259-0015 or visit our website to schedule a consultation. Our team is ready to help you reclaim your energy, strength, and vitality.
MultiGen Wellness Services & Locations
Hormone Therapy Services:
- Online Testosterone Replacement Therapy (TRT)
- Women’s Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
- Peptide Therapy — Sermorelin, BPC-157, Semaglutide
- Medical Weight Loss — Semaglutide & Tirzepatide
- Sermorelin HGH Therapy
Locations: Houston TX | Dallas TX | San Antonio TX | Phoenix AZ | Naples FL | Bloomfield Hills MI | Scarsdale NY | View All Locations