Hormone Optimization + Men’s Health

Low Testosterone

A more precise, medically grounded approach to low testosterone — built around real symptom patterns, comprehensive hormone testing, and treatment planning that looks at energy, libido, body composition, mood, and long-term health.

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What It Is The live page defines low testosterone as inadequate production of testosterone by the testicles, with sexual, physical, and mood effects.1
Common Symptoms Low libido, erectile dysfunction, fatigue, loss of muscle mass, increased body fat, and mood changes are all common signs.1, 2, 3
How It’s Diagnosed Diagnosis depends on symptoms plus laboratory confirmation, not symptoms alone.2, 4
Why It Matters Untreated deficiency can affect sexual function, vitality, body composition, and quality of life.1, 2
A Smarter Hormone Evaluation

Symptoms matter, but numbers alone are not the whole story.

The current Joshua R. Gonzalez page correctly positions low testosterone as a condition that can affect libido, erections, body composition, stamina, and mood. It also emphasizes that diagnosis begins with comprehensive hormone testing rather than guesswork.

That is what makes this service page stronger when it feels both elevated and clinically intelligent. Men are often not just asking, “Is my testosterone low?” They are asking why they feel different, why performance changed, why energy dropped, and whether treatment is actually the right next step.

Sexual Health

Libido and erectile function

Low testosterone can contribute to reduced sexual desire and may overlap with erectile dysfunction in some men.1, 2

Physical Changes

Body composition and strength

Loss of muscle mass, increased abdominal fat, and reduced endurance can be part of the pattern.1, 3

Mood + Energy

Fatigue and emotional shifts

Irritability, low motivation, low energy, and depression can appear alongside hormonal decline.1, 3

Root Cause

Why testing comes first

Medications, pituitary disorders, testicular injury, genetic conditions, and chronic illness can all influence testosterone levels.1, 2

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Clinical Approach

Better treatment starts with better context.

The live page highlights advanced diagnostics and individualized treatment planning, which is the right direction. Low testosterone should not be treated as a trend or lifestyle label. It should be worked up carefully, with attention to symptoms, lab timing, medication history, fertility goals, and the broader sexual wellness picture.

In the right patient, testosterone replacement can be helpful. In the wrong patient, or without proper evaluation, it can be the wrong move. That is exactly why a more considered consultation matters.

What Evaluation May Include

Clear diagnosis before replacement planning

Evaluation may include
  • Detailed symptom and sexual health review
  • Morning testosterone and related lab testing
  • Medication and supplement review
  • Assessment of libido, erections, energy, and mood
  • Review of fertility and family-planning goals
  • Personalized treatment discussion if clinically appropriate
Treatment planning

Treatment may include testosterone replacement when indicated, but not every patient with symptoms is automatically a candidate. Clinical guidelines emphasize matching treatment to both symptoms and confirmed laboratory evidence of deficiency.2, 4

The right plan should feel measured, informed, and individualized — not generic.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Common signs include low libido, erectile dysfunction, fatigue, reduced muscle mass, increased abdominal fat, mood changes, and thinning body hair.1, 2, 3

Diagnosis is based on both symptoms and laboratory confirmation of low testosterone, typically with properly timed blood testing.2, 4

Yes. The live page specifically connects low testosterone with reduced libido and erectile dysfunction, and major references support that relationship in some men.1, 2

No. Testosterone treatment should be based on confirmed deficiency, symptoms, and a careful medical evaluation — not symptoms alone.2, 4

If you are experiencing persistent fatigue, low libido, erection changes, body-composition shifts, or mood changes that may be hormone-related, it is worth getting evaluated.

Contact the Office

Ready for a more precise hormone workup?

If you are concerned about low testosterone in Los Angeles, request a consultation with Joshua R. Gonzalez, MD.

5757 Wilshire Blvd, Suite 475
Los Angeles, CA 90036
(323) 607-2895
Monday–Friday: 9:00 AM–5:00 PM
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