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Gameday Men’s Health Wexford — Fertlo Editorial Review

Independent editorial overview · Wexford, PA
Photo of Dr. Hrishikesh Pai

Dr. Hrishikesh Pai, MD (Gold Medalist), FRCOG (Hon. UK), MSc, FCPS, FICOG

5 min read
Medically Reviewed
Photo of Dr. Cristian Jesam

Dr. Cristian Jesam, MD

Reproductive Medicine & IVF Instituto Chileno de Medicina Reproductiva (ICMER), Santiago; Universidad de Chile; SGFertility Chile

Last reviewed:

Gameday Men's Health Wexford — An Honest Editorial Review

Important context first. Gameday Men's Health Wexford is a testosterone-replacement and sexual-wellness clinic, not a fertility clinic. But we are writing an editorial about it because a very large share of men who start conventional testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) are unaware of an inconvenient fact: exogenous testosterone suppresses the body's own sperm production, often dramatically and sometimes durably. If you are a male patient at (or considering) a TRT clinic and you also want biological children, that intersection deserves a careful conversation — ideally with both a men's-health clinician and a reproductive urologist or REI.

Patients seeking actual fertility care in western Pennsylvania should start with our directory of fertility clinics in Pennsylvania.

About the Clinic

Gameday Men's Health is a franchise-style men's wellness chain. The Wexford, PA location opened in 2024 and serves Gibsonia, Seven Fields, and the North Hills suburbs of Pittsburgh. Services are run on a no-insurance-needed, cash-pay model with same-day lab results (in-house 15-minute testosterone assay) and a free initial consultation. Treatment plans are developed and supervised by licensed healthcare professionals.

Services Offered

Gameday Wexford's menu includes:

  • Testosterone therapy: testosterone cypionate injections, subcutaneous testosterone pellets, oral TRT
  • Pituitary / HPG-axis alternatives: Clomid therapy, Enclomiphene
  • Erectile-dysfunction care: GAINSWave (shockwave), Priapus Shot (P-Shot), Trimix injections, Viagra, Cialis
  • Sexual-wellness peptides: PT-141
  • Metabolic / weight-loss: GLP-1 therapy (semaglutide/tirzepatide), MIC-lipotropic injections, Phentermine
  • Longevity adjuncts: NAD+ injections

The initial visit runs 30–45 minutes and includes lab work, a personalized consultation, and a review of health goals.

Why This Editorial Matters for Male Fertility

Patients considering or already receiving TRT need to know several things that are often underemphasized at TRT clinics:

  1. Exogenous testosterone suppresses sperm production. When you inject or implant testosterone, the brain's hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis reads that as "enough testosterone in the system" and reduces the LH and FSH signals that drive the testes to make testosterone and sperm. Sperm counts can drop to zero on conventional TRT — this is so reliable that testosterone has been studied as a male contraceptive.
  2. Recovery after stopping TRT is not guaranteed to be fast or complete. Most men recover sperm production in 6–18 months after stopping, but a subset take longer, and a small minority have persistent suppression. The peer-reviewed literature documents this variability.
  3. Alternatives that preserve fertility exist. Clomid (clomiphene citrate), Enclomiphene, and hCG injections can raise endogenous testosterone without suppressing spermatogenesis — these are often better choices for men who want to feel better and preserve fertility. Gameday's menu does include Clomid and Enclomiphene, which is good; patients should specifically ask whether a fertility-sparing protocol is appropriate before starting cypionate injections or pellets.
  4. Sperm banking before TRT is usually a good idea. If you are firmly planning to start testosterone and want a backup, banking 2–3 semen samples at a cryobank before starting is relatively inexpensive insurance.

What This Clinic Is — and Isn't

Gameday Men's Health is a men's-wellness clinic focused on TRT, ED treatment, weight loss, and peptides. It is not a fertility clinic, not a reproductive-urology practice, and not staffed by board-certified reproductive urologists. The clinic does not perform semen analysis as a primary diagnostic, does not perform sperm banking, and does not offer varicocele repair or microsurgical vasectomy reversal. Men who need fertility-focused evaluation should see a reproductive urologist (ABU-certified with male-infertility fellowship training).

Pennsylvania Fertility Insurance Context

Pennsylvania is not a fertility-coverage-mandate state; there is no state law requiring commercial insurers to cover IVF or IUI. TRT coverage is a separate issue — many commercial plans cover medically-indicated testosterone replacement, though cash-pay TRT clinics like Gameday typically operate outside insurance. Our fertility insurance mandates by state guide covers the broader landscape.

Finding Male-Fertility Specialty Care in Western PA

For patients who want testosterone therapy in a fertility-informed way, the right sequence usually looks like:

  1. See a reproductive urologist first for a baseline semen analysis and HPG-axis labs. Pittsburgh's academic centers (UPMC, Allegheny Health Network) have reproductive-urology specialists.
  2. Discuss fertility-sparing alternatives (Clomid, Enclomiphene, hCG) before considering cypionate or pellets.
  3. Bank sperm before starting conventional TRT if you may want biological children in the future.
  4. If female-partner workup also warranted, start with an REI — our Pennsylvania fertility-clinic directory is a starting point.

Patient Experience

The 4.9/174 Google rating for Gameday Wexford reflects strong patient satisfaction within the TRT/ED category, where many men experience real quality-of-life improvements when treatment is appropriate. Reviews typically emphasize convenience, quick turnaround, and symptom improvement. Fertility concerns are rarely mentioned in that review profile — which is itself the reason this editorial exists.

Considering At-Home Insemination?

If you are a male patient on TRT who wants biological children but your sperm count has dropped to low or zero levels, at-home insemination is unlikely to work — the bottleneck is sperm availability, not delivery method. The right step is a reproductive-urology consult to plan either cycling off TRT with monitoring, switching to fertility-sparing alternatives, or proceeding with testicular sperm extraction for IVF/ICSI if indicated.

For couples where the male partner does not have a sperm-production issue and you are in a no-known-diagnosis phase, MakeAMom kits are a reusable, plain-packaged at-home option that pair with basic preconception health work.

Location and Contact

Address: Wexford, PA (serves Gibsonia, Seven Fields, North Hills) Website: gamedaymenshealth.com/wexford Opened: 2024 Insurance: Cash-pay, no insurance required

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Gameday Men's Health a fertility clinic? No. It is a men's-wellness clinic focused on TRT, ED, weight loss, and peptides. It does not perform semen analysis as a primary diagnostic or offer fertility-specific procedures.

Will testosterone therapy affect my fertility? Yes. Conventional exogenous testosterone (cypionate, pellets, oral) suppresses sperm production, often dramatically. Sperm banking before starting, or choosing fertility-sparing alternatives like Clomid or Enclomiphene, is worth discussing with a reproductive urologist.

Do they offer sperm banking? No. Sperm banking is done at specialized cryobanks.

Does Pennsylvania insurance cover IVF? No. Pennsylvania has no state fertility-coverage mandate.


Editorial note: Transparency-first editorial documenting that this is a TRT/ED clinic rather than a fertility provider, with specific attention to the TRT/fertility intersection. Independently written by the Fertlo editorial team; not sponsored; no affiliation with Gameday Men's Health. See our editorial policy.

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