You're another person with high testosterone and no libido. It's a pattern i've been reading about from others. It's often considered if you have high T. then you'll feel sexy but as you, me (female) and many others out there with high T who have no libido is testament to the fact that libido is more than just testosterone levels.
It's a shame you don't have your estrogen and progesterone levels tested as that would give a more overall picture, as men also need these 'female' hormones.
Research so far seems to indicate to have a good libido we need a balance of ALL 3 'sex' hormones....not just testosterone.
High testosterone tends to make a person feel irritable, easily annoyed, angered...with the plus side of having incredible strength and easy to put on muscle. The downside, for men (and women with high T) is balding early, acne, hair in places it shouldn't be!
Perhaps your T has got higher due to adrenal stress. Your DHEAS is high with normal morning/low cortisol.
The pattern often seen correlated between DHEAS and cortisol is initially there is high cortisol and DHEAS, then as the 'stress' continues cortisol begins to drop and DHEAS remains elevated, then as 'stress' becomes chronic cortisol levels are all low and DHEAS is low too.
With you values it suggests you're in that middle range of lowering cortisol while your DHEAS remains elevated.
Identifying what is causing your stress is the true way to heal. Sometimes this cause can elude us.
It could be lifestyle, hectic life...emotional stuff, or perhaps your work involves working with toxins you're unaware of and daily exposure is taxing your system. It could be a viral or bacterial infection. Going through your health history and exposures is useful in trying to figure out physiological causes.
DHEAS converts to testosterone - so perhaps that is why you now have high T compared to 2 yrs ago, with all that excess DHEAS you have it is converting into more T?
You probably didn't have high DHEAS 2 yrs ago and therefore lower T values.
It is generally considered that DHEAS rises as cortisol levels rise, and then levels fall as cortisol falls.
All hormones are made from cholesterol, converting to pregnenolone and then onto ALL the other hormones. If there is a 'stressor' the body needs more cortisol - it even happens when we have a cold for a few days. It's a normal response. So if there is an unknown stressor there is a need for more cortisol than normal, so the body prioritises cortisol production over all other hormones as it's a 'life' hormone, without which we die. With cortisol being prioritised, all other hormone production declines, unless we know what is going on and consume more cholesterol or take pregnenolone, which no-one does at the initial stages of stress! It's only a band-aid solution anyway as the stress needs to stop so all hormone production can go back to being balanced.
How to treat the imbalances depends on the individual. I don't agree that one protocol works for all. It depends on the individuals stressors. If you know your life is hectic and you've been running around like a mad thing for a few years trying to keep up then it's plausible that it's perpetual lifestyle choices revving up your HPA-axis and thus causing the imbalance of hormones.
If your hormones went out of whack while life was not so hectic and crazy then it's worth looking into other causes for the body needing to be so adrenal-dominant.
Dr Lam mainly deals with adrenal imbalance due to lifestyle causations, and when his protocol doesn't work on the percentage of people he works with, he always seems to say that it's an underlying viral/bacterial infection causing the adrenal system to be working over-time.
Finding out the causation is worth the effort. Implementing the standard type of protocol to nourish the adrenals is worth doing, but bear in mind that if the stressor remains, you're only nourishing your adrenals to cope with the persistent stress...instead of being on the path to healing the system.