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I will admit a lot of info goes over my head. I have been on the ADT treatment for a little over two years. Since the beginning my testosterone level has stayed < 3. I have no idea what it was before starting the treatment. I get I'm 70 years old, had no idea I would feel this old so soon. I don't get to count them but I do believe there is more then one truck running me over. I don't understand, if the testosterone level doesn't increase, where is the energy level coming from for the gym rats on here. I recently retired, been doing yard projects, I do about 3-4 hours of work and I'm done for the day, and its not like I'm the energizer bunny when doing the work. I don't take naps during the day, and I am learning that if I take a day off and pretty much don't do anything, I feel better the next day. I am very tuned in that if I sit in that chair all day, I'm going to be in trouble so I try to keep moving forward. Hope I didn't go off the tracks here. Best to all.

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Replies to "I will admit a lot of info goes over my head. I have been on the..."

I’ve always been real active, but I would never consider doing three or four hours of Yard projects. I’ve got a small park across the street from my house with a quarter mile track. I go there twice a day every day and walk about a mile each time. I also go to the gym three days a week and spend an hour there working constantly. I really don’t feel much of any fatigue at all. After eight years of ADT, that’s one side effect. I haven’t had a serious problem with.

If you do some looking around, you will find that there are a number of articles about the need for exercise when you have prostate cancer and take ADT drugs. Exercise is essential to beat that fatigue for people that have it. And don’t be afraid of taking a 20 minute nap in the afternoon. A short nap can refresh you a long one can tire you. Look on YouTube and you will find a number of prostate cancer exercise videos. It’s the sort of thing where you start off tired you force yourself to exercise and by the time you are done that fatigue has reduced considerably. Somebody wrote about an exact experience like thus in this forum in the last week or so.

I was 65y in 2021 when I started my 28 proton radiation treatments and 6 months of Eligard.
My T level dropped to 3.0 ng/dL, but mostly stayed in the high single-digits & low double-digits. My PSA stayed at 0.008 ng/mL the entire time the Eligard was in my system.

It’s well known that ADT can make you “feel this old so soon.” —>
https://m.youtube.com/watch
The energy level comes from starting resistance-training exercise well before starting ADT. If you don’t start early, or if you start and then take a break, that’s a big problem.

My medical oncologist advised me about this (and I had read about it myself) so, as a gym rat, it was easy enough to ramp up my exercise routine during the entire time the ADT was in my system. (I have since backed down to easier levels.)

Yes, the lack of energy will show up in basic home activities just like you’re mentioning - even yard work and gardening. Remember that the hormone that gives you all of your male characteristics, including strength, fitness, endurance, etc, is basically being suppressed. Your T levels are now below most/all women’s levels. (I refer to ADT as kryptonite. Remember on the old Superman TV shows of what Kryptonite would do to him? That’s what ADT does to men.)

Resistance-training exercise is key to getting through ADT.