All Testosterone Replacement Therapy Locations

Testosterone Replacement Therapy in Harpswell, Maine

Harpswell is a town stretched thin across the water, with the longest coastline in Maine and a shape often described as three fingers reaching into Casco Bay. If you live out on Harpswell Neck, on Great Island, or down in Cundy's Harbor, you already know how far a good doctor can feel. Med Matrix runs testosterone replacement therapy for men about 35 minutes away in South Portland, with thorough lab work and real provider time instead of a rushed refill.

35 min from Harpswell

4.9 stars150+ reviews3,000+ patients7 providers

TRT for Men in Harpswell, Built on Real Testing

Low testosterone rarely shows up as one obvious thing. It is the steady drop in energy that no amount of sleep fixes, the workouts that stop paying off, the lower drive, the fog that settles in by mid-afternoon. Plenty of men in Harpswell push through it because that is what the work here demands, whether the day is spent hauling traps off a wharf or driving Route 123 down the Neck for an early start. The problem is that pushing through does not tell you what your levels actually are.

At Med Matrix we start with measurement, not assumptions. Before any man begins testosterone replacement therapy, we run a full panel that looks at total and free testosterone, estradiol, and the markers around red blood cell count and prostate health that responsible TRT requires. Our advanced testing goes well beyond a single number so we can see whether testosterone is truly the root cause or whether thyroid, metabolic, or other issues are part of the picture. Men deserve a clear answer before starting a therapy they may stay on for years.

Everything Under One Roof

Advanced testing, personalized protocols, and real results from a team that treats the whole picture.

Worth the Drive From the Peninsula

Harpswell is built for the water, not for quick errands inland. The roads out to Bailey and Orr's Islands or down toward South Harpswell run narrow and slow, and the nearest real medical options sit a stretch away. Most men here are already used to driving for anything beyond the basics, and the trip to South Portland is a straight shot down I-295 to the Maine Mall area, roughly 35 minutes from much of town.

We make that drive count. Your testosterone replacement therapy plan is built around a full hour with a provider who reviews every result with you, not a five-minute visit and a prescription. Once you are dialed in, follow-up monitoring is simple and we keep the in-person trips to what genuinely needs to happen in the clinic. For a town this far out on the bay, fewer wasted trips and a plan that actually works is the whole point. When you are ready, you can start feeling like yourself again.

Where Your Providers Train

Functional medicine isn't taught in medical school. Our providers invest years of additional training with the institutions that built this field.

Institute for Functional Medicine logo

Institute for Functional Medicine(IFM)

The academic home of functional medicine. IFMCP certification requires advanced training in hormonal, immune, gastrointestinal, and neuroendocrine systems. Multiple Med Matrix providers hold this credential.

Your provider sees how your hormones, gut, immune system, and metabolism connect, not just isolated symptoms.

Seeds Scientific Research & Performance logo

Seeds Scientific Research & Performance(SSRP)

Clinical training in hormone dosing, advanced lab interpretation, and peptide protocols. Where textbook medicine gets translated into treatment plans that show measurable change inside 90 days.

Your protocol is built on real clinical training, not a one-size-fits-all template.

American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine logo

American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine(A4M)

The largest training body for age-management and longevity medicine. Fellowship and board certification cover hormone replacement, peptide therapy, metabolic medicine, and regenerative therapies.

Your care team trains with the organization that sets the clinical standard for longevity medicine.

See the full credentials and training history of every provider in our free practice guide.

What Happens to a Man’s Testosterone as He Ages

Total testosterone, free testosterone, and DHEA all start declining in your 30s. Most men have been losing ground for years before the symptoms get obvious enough to act on.

Peak75%50%25%0%Hormone level20304050607080Age (years)Where TRT keeps youSymptoms startTotal TestosteroneFree TestosteroneDHEA

Illustrative pattern of natural hormone change across a man's lifespan. Individual labs vary.

We use bioidentical testosterone. That means the molecular structure matches what your body already makes, so your cells recognize and use it the way they were built to. Synthetic alternatives behave differently. Your body knows the difference.

Most protocols involve testosterone combined with monitoring of estradiol, SHBG, hematocrit, and PSA. Free testosterone matters more than total, and most conventional providers never test it. Low free T drives the drop in energy, drive, recovery, and body composition that most men assume is just part of getting older.

Our practice guide covers exactly how we approach men’s TRT, including delivery options, lab monitoring, and what to expect in the first 90 days. Get your free copy.

How Your TRT Protocol Is Built

Testosterone replacement therapy at Med Matrix starts with lab work, not a prescription. Your provider orders a panel covering total and free testosterone, estrogen, SHBG, thyroid markers, cortisol, and metabolic health indicators. That full picture determines whether TRT is the right move or whether something else is driving your symptoms.

If TRT is appropriate, most patients start with weekly testosterone cypionate injections. Your provider sets the dose based on your labs, not a standard template. Follow-up labs at 6 and 12 weeks confirm your levels are responding. Estrogen management is built into the protocol from the start, not added after problems show up.

Once stable, most patients come in about twice a year for check-ins and lab reviews. Between visits, your care team is available if something feels off.

Lab Markers We Track During TRT

A standard testosterone test checks one number. Our panel runs over 80 biomarkers because testosterone does not exist in isolation. Here is what your provider is looking at and why it matters for Harpswell patients considering TRT:

  • Total and free testosterone show how much testosterone your body produces and how much is available to use.
  • Estradiol (E2) tracks estrogen levels. When testosterone is supplemented, some converts to estrogen. Your provider monitors this to prevent side effects.
  • SHBG (sex hormone binding globulin) binds testosterone and makes it unavailable. High SHBG can explain why your total testosterone looks normal but you still feel off.
  • Thyroid panel (TSH, free T3, free T4) catches thyroid dysfunction that mimics low testosterone symptoms like fatigue and weight gain.
  • Fasting insulin and HbA1c flag insulin resistance, which directly suppresses testosterone production.
  • CBC and hematocrit are monitored during TRT because testosterone can increase red blood cell production.

This level of testing is why patients drive from Harpswell to work with our team. The labs tell the full story, and your provider builds your protocol from that story.

Advanced Testing for Men's Hormone Health

When your standard panel points to something that needs further investigation, we have the tools to go deeper. These advanced tests are not part of every patient's protocol. They are available when your provider needs more information to build the right plan.

DUTCH Complete

What it measures: Dried urine panel of every sex hormone metabolite plus cortisol rhythm.

Why we use it: Serum hormones are a snapshot. DUTCH shows the full metabolic picture over a day, including how you process hormones and whether your stress system is burning out.

Cardiovascular & Longevity Markers

What it measures: Advanced cardiac panel with Apo-B, Lp(a), and oxidized LDL.

Why we use it: Standard lipid panels miss the markers that actually predict cardiac events. This panel catches risk years earlier.

Genetic & Methylation Analysis

What it measures: SNPs affecting methylation, detox capacity, hormone metabolism, and nutrient needs.

Why we use it: Your genes tell us which interventions will work for your biology and which ones won't. MTHFR, COMT, VDR, and others change how you should be supplemented.

Neurotransmitter Panel

What it measures: Urinary markers for serotonin, dopamine, GABA, and their precursors.

Why we use it: Before trying another approach, we see whether the raw material is actually there. Low precursors explain a lot of mood and focus issues.

Our practice guide includes the full catalog of advanced testing options with detailed descriptions of what each one measures. Get your free copy.

Serving Harpswell, Maine

Take the First Step

Get your free practice guide and a $100 voucher toward your first visit. No commitment required.

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Free practice guide and $100 voucher toward your first functional medicine visit

Free Practice Guide + $100 Voucher

Everything you need before your first visit

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Insights from Our Podcast

Our providers break down the science behind your health concerns and what you can do about them.

Med Matrix Podcast: The Testosterone Crisis: What to Do About Low T

The Testosterone Crisis: What to Do About Low T

Cole Siefer hosts Colin Renaud, PA-C, for a live deep dive on low testosterone in men. Colin explains the difference between lab-low and suboptimal testosterone, why a normal total testosterone can still leave a man symptomatic, and which markers actually matter: free testosterone, bioavailable testosterone, SHBG, and estradiol. The conversation covers what testosterone does beyond sex drive and muscle, including mood, cognition, bone density, insulin sensitivity, and body composition, then walks through the most common root causes of low T: insulin resistance and visceral fat, poor sleep and sleep apnea, chronic stress, alcohol, overtraining, and certain medications. Colin describes where conventional medicine and online TRT clinics fall short, how Med Matrix decides who needs TRT versus foundational support first, and how injections are dosed and monitored throughout the year. He shares a case study of a 43-year-old construction worker dismissed twice with a normal total testosterone whose free testosterone turned out to be low, then closes with a live Q&A covering TRT side effects, administration, age, prostate history, and natural ways to support testosterone.

Watch Episode →
Med Matrix Podcast: Hormone Replacement Therapy Explained: Benefits, History, and Root Causes

Hormone Replacement Therapy Explained: Benefits, History, and Root Causes

In this episode of The Med Matrix Method, host Cole Siefer welcomes Sophia, a nurse practitioner with 20 years of experience and 5 years in functional medicine, for an introduction to hormone replacement therapy for both men and women. Sophia explains what HRT actually replaces (estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone) as levels decline in perimenopause, menopause, and andropause, and why declining hormones drive symptoms like hot flashes, night sweats, anxiety, insomnia, fatigue, low libido, and brain fog. She walks through the history that made hormones controversial, including the 2002 Women's Health Initiative study that used synthetic hormones and concluded hormones cause cancer, and contrasts that with the bioidentical hormones used today and the FDA recently lifting the black box warning on vaginal estrogen. The conversation covers why hormones matter for cardiovascular, bone, and brain protection over a lifetime, the root causes behind hormone imbalance (thyroid issues, insulin resistance, sleep apnea, stress, lifestyle), and how a functional medicine approach evaluates the whole person before starting therapy. Practical takeaways: do not ignore new symptoms, check your blood work, and address sleep, stress, nutrition, and metabolic health alongside hormones.

Watch Episode →
Med Matrix Podcast: The HPA Axis: Cortisol, Stress, and Adrenal Health with Dr. Rose

The HPA Axis: Cortisol, Stress, and Adrenal Health with Dr. Rose

Cole Siefer sits down with Dr. Sasha Rose, a naturopathic physician and lead provider at Med Matrix with over 20 years in functional medicine, to walk through the HPA axis: the pathway connecting the hypothalamus, pituitary, and adrenal glands that governs the body's cortisol and stress response. Dr. Rose explains the normal daily cortisol rhythm (high in the morning, low at night) and why the popular term adrenal fatigue is not an actual clinical diagnosis but usually points to cortisol dysregulation. She maps the stages of dysregulation, from a hyperactive, always-on state to a low-functioning, flattened cortisol curve, and describes the patients she sees most often, including the driven 20-something in sympathetic overdrive and the exhausted working mother. The conversation covers practical levers Med Matrix uses: salivary cortisol testing for a 24-hour picture, adaptogenic herbs, peptides, sleep and caffeine habits, nutrition, and rebalancing movement like yoga. Dr. Rose also connects the HPA axis to gut and liver health, cholesterol and hormone production, mitochondrial function, early childhood trauma, and immune resilience. A patient case study and a short Q&A round out the episode.

Watch Episode →
Med Matrix Podcast: Why Your Total Testosterone Is Misleading: SHBG, DHEA, and the Estrobolome Explained

Why Your Total Testosterone Is Misleading: SHBG, DHEA, and the Estrobolome Explained

Cole Siefer and Dr. Sasha Rose break down hormone deficiency in depth, covering how sex hormones (estrogen, progesterone, testosterone), adrenal hormones (cortisol, DHEA), and thyroid are all interconnected. Dr. Rose explains the perimenopause-to-menopause spectrum, why standard hormone testing often misses the real picture, and how sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) can render testosterone functionally useless even when total levels look fine on paper. The episode also covers the gut-hormone connection through the estrobolome, the impact of toxins and liver function on hormone metabolism, cortisol dysregulation from chronic stress, and the critical difference between bio-identical and synthetic hormone replacement therapy.

Watch Episode →

How It Works

Your path to feeling like yourself again, step by step.

01.

Free Discovery Call

  • Talk with our patient coordinator about your goals, symptoms, and concerns
  • Understand your options and what to expect
  • Get matched with the right provider for your needs

Result: A clear next step personalized to your situation, with no pressure or commitment.

02.

80+ Biomarker Test & Full Body Scan

  • Comprehensive panel of 80+ lab markers
  • Full body composition scan
  • In-depth health questionnaires

Result: A complete picture of your health, so nothing gets missed.

03.

Medical Team Reviews Everything

  • Providers review your labs, medical history, and questionnaires
  • Cross-reference symptoms with biomarker patterns
  • Identify root causes, not just surface symptoms

Result: A personalized treatment plan built from real data, not guesswork.

04.

60-Minute Provider Consultation

  • Sit down with your provider for a full hour
  • Go over every result in detail
  • Build your personalized plan together

Result: You leave with a clear understanding of what is happening and exactly what to do about it.

05.

Ongoing Support & Progress

  • Continued monitoring of your labs and markers
  • Adjustments to your plan as your body responds
  • Direct access to your care team

Result: Real, measurable progress you can feel and see in your numbers.

Start Here

Med Matrix - Functional Medicine and Medspa

Address

198 Maine Mall Road
South Portland, ME 04106

Get Directions →

Phone

(207) 544-4643

Serving Harpswell and surrounding areas

Hours

Mon: 7:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Tue: 7:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Wed: 7:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Thu: 7:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Fri: 7:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Sat: Closed

Sun: Closed

Testosterone Replacement Therapy in Harpswell

Common questions about testosterone replacement therapy near Harpswell, Maine.

<p>We are at 198 Maine Mall Road in South Portland, roughly 35 minutes from most of Harpswell via Route 123 or Route 24 to I-295 South. From the islands and the far end of Harpswell Neck the drive runs a little longer, but it is a direct route once you reach the highway.</p>

<p>Common signs in men include persistent fatigue, lower sex drive, trouble building or keeping muscle, weight gain around the middle, poor sleep, low mood, and difficulty concentrating. These symptoms overlap with other conditions, which is exactly why we test before recommending testosterone replacement therapy.</p>

<p>Yes. We require a full lab panel first, including total and free testosterone along with the safety markers that responsible TRT depends on. Testing tells us whether testosterone is the real cause of your symptoms and gives us a baseline to compare against as treatment progresses.</p>

<p>The early phase involves a free discovery call, comprehensive testing, and a full hour with your provider. After your plan is set, follow-up monitoring is straightforward and we keep in-person visits to what truly needs to be done in the clinic, which matters when you are driving in from a peninsula town.</p>

<p>Yes. There is no single dose that fits every man. We build your plan around your labs, your symptoms, and your goals, then adjust as your body responds over time so you stay in a healthy, effective range.</p>

<p>It begins with a free discovery call to talk through your goals and symptoms, followed by lab work and a full provider consultation. You can book your first visit on our get started page and we will guide you from there.</p>

No. After your initial onboarding, most TRT patients settle into check-ins about twice a year. Between visits, your provider monitors labs and adjusts your protocol as needed. The initial visit and follow-up labs require in-person visits.

TRT uses pharmaceutical-grade testosterone cypionate prescribed based on your lab results. Over-the-counter supplements contain ingredients like ashwagandha or D-aspartic acid that may support general health but do not raise testosterone to therapeutic levels. If your labs show clinical deficiency, supplements will not fix it.

Free practice guide and $100 voucher for functional medicine consultation at Med Matrix

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