What did @correanavarro actually say?
The caption claims testosterone pellets are "the favorite of artists" because they increase libido, energy, and vitality. The spoken transcript, however, is largely incoherent and does not deliver any verifiable clinical claims. So we're fact-checking the written caption, not a nuanced medical argument.
The core assertion is straightforward: subcutaneous testosterone pellets produce improvements in sexual drive, energy levels, and general sense of wellbeing. That's a real clinical claim that deserves real scrutiny, especially when it's being served to 56,000 viewers on TikTok with no medical disclaimers attached.
Does the science back this up?
Partially, yes. But the framing is oversimplified in ways that matter. Testosterone pellets do have a legitimate evidence base for specific populations, primarily men diagnosed with hypogonadism and postmenopausal women receiving hormone therapy. The benefits are not universal, and the delivery method has real tradeoffs.
A 2019 systematic review by Khera et al. in Sexual Medicine Reviews found that testosterone therapy in hypogonadal men does improve sexual function, including libido, in a clinically meaningful way. Energy improvements and reduced fatigue are also documented, though effect sizes vary widely depending on baseline testosterone levels. A 2017 study by Glaser and Dimitrakakis in Maturitas specifically examined pellet delivery and found sustained serum levels over 3-6 months with reasonable patient satisfaction scores. So yes, the general direction of the claim is supported. But calling it the "favorite of artists" as though it's a lifestyle upgrade for healthy people is where this goes off the rails.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
They got the broad strokes right and the framing wrong. Testosterone pellets can increase libido and energy, but only in people who are actually deficient. Using testosterone when your levels are already normal doesn't reliably produce those benefits and carries real risks, including suppression of natural production, erythrocytosis, and in women, virilization effects.
The "favorite of artists" framing implies this is a performance enhancement tool for healthy, creative people. That's a misleading angle. The FDA has not approved testosterone therapy for age-related fatigue or general vitality in otherwise healthy individuals. A 2020 meta-analysis by Sartorius et al. in Andrology found no consistent energy benefit in eugonadal men given exogenous testosterone. The pellet format also carries specific risks the video ignores entirely: pellet extrusion, infection at the insertion site, and the inability to quickly reverse dosing if side effects emerge, unlike gels or injections.
What should you actually know?
If you're genuinely fatigued, have low libido, or feel like your energy has tanked, testosterone levels are one piece of a larger diagnostic picture. A proper workup includes total and free testosterone, SHBG, LH, FSH, and a review of thyroid function and sleep quality. Low testosterone is a real condition that responds to real treatment, pellets included.
But pellets are not magic implants for healthy people who want more energy. The "vitality" framing in this video is the kind of language that sells procedures, not the kind that reflects clinical evidence. Pellet therapy is also one of the more expensive TRT delivery methods, and insurance coverage is inconsistent. If you're curious about TRT, talk to a licensed provider who will actually test your levels first, not someone selling you on what celebrities allegedly use.