Low testosterone
Testosterone replacement therapy
For injections, gels, oral therapy, pellets, monitoring, fertility risks, and safety questions.
What patients are usually trying to decide
Patients need a careful medical workup before assuming testosterone therapy is the answer.
A urologist may review morning testosterone labs, repeat testing, symptoms, pituitary labs, fertility goals, PSA, blood counts, and risk factors.
Procedures and appointment paths
Injectable testosterone
A testosterone delivery option that requires monitoring of symptoms, levels, blood counts, and side effects.
Topical testosterone
Gel, cream, or patch options may be discussed along with transfer risk and monitoring needs.
Testosterone pellets
A longer-acting testosterone option placed under the skin for selected patients.
New Jersey appointment path
Talk with a urologist about Testosterone replacement therapy
Start with the practice directly. Do not send sensitive medical details through public forms; the office can move the conversation into the right intake process.
