Low desire is a signal, not a personality change.
Low libido in men is one of the most common — and one of the most under-investigated — complaints we hear. The drivers are usually layered: testosterone is the most common single cause, but thyroid dysfunction, prolactin elevation, certain antidepressants, sleep deprivation, chronic stress, and relationship factors all contribute. The free first visit screens for all of these.
Libido is a sensitive marker of overall hormonal and metabolic health. Persistent low desire that's a clear change from your baseline isn't 'just getting older' — it's a signal that something measurable has shifted. Most men accept it, attribute it to stress or marriage duration, and never bring it up to a physician. We treat it as a clinical complaint that deserves a workup.
Total and free testosterone (low T is the most common driver). SHBG, which can elevate free T binding even when total T looks 'normal.' Estradiol (both too high and too low affect libido). Prolactin (elevated prolactin suppresses sexual function). Thyroid panel including free T3 and reverse T3. Vitamin D, ferritin, and sleep quality assessment. Comprehensive medication review (SSRIs, beta-blockers, finasteride, and many others can suppress libido).
Hormonal: testosterone replacement when labs and symptoms warrant. Centrally-acting: PT-141 (bremelanotide) for psychogenic or central libido components. Mechanical/vascular: P-Shot or Softwave shockwave when ED is contributing to anticipatory low desire. Behavioral: medication review, stress management referrals, sleep optimization. Most cases are mixed and require layered treatment.
Physician-supervised testosterone replacement therapy. $199/month all-inclusive.
Targeted peptide protocols. $49/month physician oversight.
Regenerative protocols for erectile quality and sensitivity.
Free first visit. On-site testosterone test, body composition scan, 15 minutes with the medical director. No commitment.
or call (817) 749-6946