How doctors assess possible testosterone deficiency
International guidance is consistent on one important point: testosterone deficiency is not diagnosed from symptoms alone. The Endocrine Society recommends diagnosis only when men have symptoms or signs consistent with testosterone deficiency and consistently low testosterone concentrations on reliable testing. It also recommends confirming the finding with a repeat morning fasting total testosterone measurement.
A useful assessment usually looks beyond testosterone itself. A doctor may consider LH and FSH to distinguish primary testicular causes from pituitary or hypothalamic causes, as well as prolactin, thyroid function, metabolic markers, medication history, sleep, weight changes, fertility goals, and mental health.
Why many symptoms overlap
Low libido, erectile changes, reduced morning erections, fatigue, low mood, and poor recovery can be associated with testosterone deficiency, but they can also be caused by sleep apnoea, depression, diabetes, thyroid disease, high alcohol intake, overtraining, obesity, medication effects, or relationship and stress factors. This is why a structured medical review is more reliable than a symptom checklist alone.