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Testosterone Replacement Therapy · Delray Beach, FL

Testosterone Replacement Therapy (TRT) in Delray Beach — Physician-Supervised, Evidence-Based.

Strong Health brings physician-supervised TRT to Delray Beach and Palm Beach County. Florida-licensed doctors, full diagnostic bloodwork, and transparent self-pay pricing — same clinical standard as TRT therapy in Miami-Dade.

  • In-person Miami clinic
  • Florida-licensed physician
  • Comprehensive lab panel
  • Same-week consults
  • Transparent self-pay · superbill provided

What is TRT?

Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) is a physician-prescribed program that brings testosterone back into a healthy range for men with lab-confirmed low testosterone (hypogonadism). Every Strong Health TRT plan starts with a full lab panel and an evaluation by a Florida-licensed physician. We treat symptoms against biomarkers — not symptoms alone, and not lab values in a vacuum.

Delray Beach patients with broader endocrine needs can also explore hormone replacement therapy, bioidentical hormones, and peptide therapy for weight loss, recovery, and hormone support.

Common TRT modalities

Injections — Testosterone Cypionate

Testosterone cypionate or enanthate, administered intramuscularly or subcutaneously. Typically dosed weekly or twice weekly for stable serum levels. TRT injections protocol →

Pellets

Compounded testosterone pellets are inserted subcutaneously in a brief in-office procedure and release a steady dose for 3–5 months. Good fit for patients who prefer not to self-inject. TRT pellet protocol →

Topical gels & creams

Daily-applied transdermal preparations. Useful for fine-grained dose flexibility and when injections or pellets aren't the right fit. TRT gels and topicals →

Oral TRT (Kyzatrex®)

Kyzatrex® (testosterone undecanoate) is the first FDA-approved oral testosterone replacement therapy in modern formulation. Approved by the FDA in 2022 and brought to market by Marius Pharmaceuticals, it is taken twice daily with food and absorbed primarily via the lymphatic system, which bypasses the first-pass liver metabolism that made earlier oral testosterones unsafe.

Oral TRT is sometimes considered by men who want to avoid weekly injections, in-office pellet insertions, or the transfer risk associated with daily topical gels. Like every TRT modality, oral testosterone requires baseline and follow-up bloodwork — typically total and free testosterone, hematocrit, estradiol, PSA, and a lipid panel — consistent with the American Urological Association's 2018 testosterone-deficiency guideline.

Trade-offs a clinician will usually review: the Kyzatrex label includes a blood-pressure monitoring requirement; twice-daily dosing with food calls for consistent adherence; and out-of-pocket cost is generally higher than injectable testosterone cypionate. Choosing between oral, injectable, pellet, and topical TRT is individualized to lifestyle, lab response, and tolerance.

Sources: FDA Kyzatrex prescribing information (2022); AUA Testosterone Deficiency Guideline (2018).

Clomid / Enclomiphene (fertility-preserving alternative)

For men with low testosterone who want to preserve fertility, Clomid® (clomiphene citrate) and its purified isomer enclomiphene are selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) that are sometimes prescribed off-label as an alternative to traditional TRT. Unlike exogenous testosterone — which suppresses the brain's signal to the testes and can reduce testicular volume and sperm production — these SERMs act upstream. They block estrogen feedback at the hypothalamus, increase LH and FSH, and stimulate the testes' own testosterone production.

Published studies show clomiphene can raise total testosterone into the normal range while maintaining or improving sperm parameters, which is why it is often a first-line consideration for younger men, men actively trying to conceive, or men who want to preserve future fertility. Katz DJ et al., “Outcomes of clomiphene citrate treatment in young hypogonadal men,” BJU Int (2012).

Trade-offs a clinician will usually review: as an off-label use, it is not FDA-approved for male hypogonadism (enclomiphene's New Drug Application was withdrawn in 2016); a minority of men experience mood or transient visual side effects; and the magnitude of testosterone increase is generally smaller than with injectable testosterone. Lab monitoring follows the same cadence as injectable TRT, consistent with the Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline on Testosterone Therapy (2018).

Sources: Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline — Testosterone Therapy (2018); AUA Testosterone Deficiency Guideline (2018); Katz DJ et al., BJU Int (2012).

How TRT works at Strong Health

  1. 1

    Initial consultation

    Medical history, symptom review, and physical exam with a Florida-licensed physician. Telehealth intake available for Delray Beach patients.

  2. 2

    Comprehensive lab panel

    Total and free testosterone (morning, fasted), SHBG, estradiol, CBC, CMP, lipid panel, and PSA for men ≥40.

  3. 3

    Personalized protocol

    Your physician designs the protocol — modality, dose, and ancillaries — calibrated to your symptoms, biomarkers, and risk profile.

  4. 4

    Quarterly re-check

    Bloodwork and clinical review every quarter for the first year, then biannually. Follow-ups can be done via secure video from anywhere in Florida.

Your Delray Beach physician

Strong Health Miami's clinical team Clinical Team at Strong Health. Every patient at Strong Health Miami is evaluated by a Florida-licensed physician on our clinical team. Treatment plans, lab review, and follow-ups happen under physician supervision in our Miami clinic.

TRT in Delray Beach — frequently asked questions

Medically reviewed by Strong Health Miami's clinical team. Last reviewed . Next scheduled review: .

  • What is testosterone replacement therapy (TRT)?

    Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) is a prescription medical treatment that restores testosterone to a normal range in men diagnosed with clinically low testosterone (hypogonadism). At our clinic, TRT is delivered as injections, topical gels, or implanted pellets after blood work confirms a deficiency. The FDA approves TRT only for men with low testosterone caused by a documented medical condition — not as a general anti-aging or performance treatment.

  • How do I know if I have low testosterone?

    Low testosterone often shows up as fatigue, low libido, erectile difficulty, reduced muscle mass, mood changes, brain fog, and unexplained weight gain. Diagnosis cannot be made on symptoms alone — the American Urological Association requires two separate early-morning blood tests showing total testosterone below 300 ng/dL, combined with consistent symptoms. Strong Health uses this two-test protocol for every Delray Beach patient before any testosterone replacement therapy is recommended.

  • What blood tests are needed before starting TRT?

    Before starting TRT, Strong Health orders two early-morning total testosterone tests on separate days, free testosterone, a complete blood count (CBC) to check hematocrit, a lipid panel, PSA (men 40+ or with risk factors), estradiol, LH and FSH, and a comprehensive metabolic panel. Delray Beach patients can draw locally and the results are reviewed by a Florida-licensed physician. These tests confirm the diagnosis, identify any underlying cause, and establish baseline values that we monitor at 30 days and every 6–12 months after starting therapy.

  • How is TRT administered?

    TRT is given in several FDA-approved forms: weekly intramuscular or subcutaneous injections of testosterone cypionate or enanthate, daily topical gels or solutions, subdermal pellets implanted every 3–6 months, transdermal patches, buccal tablets, and a long-acting injection (testosterone undecanoate) every 10 weeks. Each form has trade-offs in convenience, cost, and how steady the testosterone levels stay. Our clinicians match the form to the patient's goals and lifestyle.

  • How long does it take to feel results from TRT?

    Most men notice early changes — better energy, mood, and libido — within 3–4 weeks of starting TRT. Improvements in muscle mass, body composition, and erectile function typically build over 3–6 months. Cleveland Clinic notes that providers usually re-check testosterone levels 30 days into therapy and reassess overall response at 3–6 months. If symptoms have not improved by then, therapy may be adjusted or discontinued.

  • What are the side effects of TRT?

    Common side effects of testosterone replacement therapy include acne, oily skin, fluid retention, mild breast tenderness, testicular shrinkage, and reduced sperm production. Lab-detected effects can include elevated red blood cell counts (polycythemia) — reported in roughly 20% of men on TRT — and a small rise in PSA. Serious risks are rare in monitored patients, but TRT is contraindicated in untreated prostate or male breast cancer, untreated severe sleep apnea, recent heart attack or stroke, and men actively trying to conceive. Our Delray Beach patients are monitored with quarterly bloodwork to catch and manage these changes early.

  • Will TRT affect my fertility?

    Yes — exogenous testosterone suppresses the body's own testosterone production and reduces sperm count, which can cause temporary or sometimes longer-lasting infertility. The American Urological Association strongly recommends against starting TRT in men currently trying to conceive. Delray Beach patients who want to preserve fertility have alternatives such as clomiphene citrate or hCG, which can raise testosterone without shutting down sperm production. We screen for fertility goals before any prescription is written.

  • How much does TRT cost in Delray Beach?

    TRT costs in Delray Beach typically range from $150 to $400 per month depending on the delivery method (injection, gel, or pellet) and whether labs are bundled. Strong Health offers transparent flat-rate monthly programs that cover medication, labs, and follow-up visits — the same pricing model we use in Miami. Many Palm Beach County patients use HSA/FSA funds or pay out of pocket. Exact pricing is available on our /trt-cost page.

This page is for general education and does not replace a consultation with a licensed clinician. Decisions about testosterone replacement therapy must be made with a qualified medical provider based on your individual lab results and medical history.

Delray Beach & Palm Beach County service area

Strong Health serves Delray Beach and surrounding Palm Beach County communities including Delray Beach, Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, Lake Worth Beach, Palm Beach Gardens, Wellington, and West Palm Beach. Telehealth follow-ups are available statewide in Florida.

Strong Health TRT — Delray Beach

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Address
TBD — Miami, FL
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Phone
(305) 555-0100
Hours
  • Mon–Fri: 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
  • Sat: 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
  • Sun: Closed

Neighborhoods we serve

  • Miami
  • Miami Beach
  • Coral Gables
  • Brickell
  • Doral
  • Aventura
  • Wynwood
  • Pinecrest
  • Coconut Grove
  • Kendall
  • Fort Lauderdale
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Book your TRT consultation in Delray Beach

Same-week appointments available. Talk to a Florida-licensed physician about whether testosterone replacement therapy is the right fit for your symptoms and goals.

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