TSH doesn’t really have anything to do with Testosterone levels and your results are different from what my lab book says so it is difficult to interpret.
If everything is within the normal range and not on an edge, high or low, you are “normal”. Here is what one of the subscription medical websites says about serum testosterone values. Notice they are in different units so it makes interpretation impossible..
Testosterone, serum
Males: 3.0–10.0
Females: 0.3–0.7 ng/mL
[Males: 10–35
Females: 1.0–2.4 nmol/L]
Testosterone is the principal male sex hormone, produced by the Leydig cells of the testes. Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) is produced in the adrenal cortex, testes, and ovaries and is the main precursor for serum testosterone in women. In normal males after puberty, the testosterone level is twice as high as all androgens in females.
In serum, it is largely bound to albumin (38%) and to a specific steroid hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) (60%), but it is the free hormone (2%) that is physiologically active.
The total testosterone level measures both bound and free testosterone in the serum (by immunoassay).
Free or bioavailable testosterone may be calculated or measured.
Increased in: Idiopathic sexual precocity (in boys, levels may be in adult range), adrenal hyperplasia (boys), adrenocortical tumors, trophoblastic disease during pregnancy, idiopathic hirsutism, virilizing ovarian tumors, arrhenoblastoma, virilizing luteoma, testicular feminization (normal or moderately elevated), cirrhosis (through increased SHBG), hyperthyroidism. Drugs: anticonvulsants, barbiturates, estrogens, oral contraceptives (through increased SHBG).
Decreased in: Hypogonadism (primary and secondary, orchidectomy, Klinefelter syndrome, uremia, hemodialysis, hepatic insufficiency, ethanol [men]). Drugs: digoxin, spironolactone, acarbose.
The diagnosis of male hypogonadism is based on clinical symptoms and signs plus laboratory confirmation of low AM total serum testosterone levels on two different occasions. Levels below 3.0 ng/mL should be treated. Free testosterone should be measured in symptomatic patients with normal total testosterone levels. Obtain serum luteinizing hormone and FSH levels to distinguish between primary (hypergonadotropic) and secondary (hypogonadotropic) hypogonadism. Hypogonadism associated with aging (andropause) may present a mixed picture, with low testosterone levels and low to low-normal gonadotropin levels.
In men, there is a diurnal variation in serum testosterone with a 20% elevation in levels in the evenings.
Treat Endocrinol 2005;4:293. [PMID: 16185098]Ann Clin Biochem 2006;43(Pt 1):3. [PMID: 16390603]Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab 2006;20:177. [PMID: 16772150]