“…During puberty, as the basal concentrations are higher, the expected testosterone increase over the baseline is lower than in prepubertal boys [Savage, 1992;Kauschansky et al, 1995], even if the absolute Δ-increment (in ng/mL) may be higher than during prepuberty [Kauschansky et al, 1995], but opposing data have been shown in early puberty [Forest, 1979]. In healthy men, testosterone levels before and after uhCG stimulation (5,000 IU in a single dose) evaluated by mass spectrometry ( n = 72; age 18-40 years) showed a median increase of 111% (2.5-97.5 percentile: 35-347%) ( Table 2 ) [Bang et al, 2017]. In this study, none of the tested LH-GC receptor polymorphisms modulated the hCG response; a significant association between FSH-related SNPs and the testosterone increase was found, but the differences were small, leading to the conclusion that none of the examined polymorphisms had a major impact on the test results [Bang et al, 2017].…”