muscleupcrohn
Legend
So the equivalent of ~29mg and 48mg for a 60kg human (3 and 5 mg/kg in rats) isn't a "comparable" dose to the 20-25mg that plenty of people use?I am not comparing Cardarine to water and oxygen lol! Shame you chose to take such a simplistic view of that comment. I thought it would be obvious I was merely pointing out how pointless it is to 'prove' the supposed danger of something when an absurdly large dose is taken... because DUH! If you can show me a comparable study where Cardarine is shown to be dangerous at a dose comparable to what people are taking, then fair enough. However, you must be aware of the studies that show no effect on cancer cells whatsoever, and others that actually show other benefits? I'm not saying take this as gospel either, but the evidence as a whole hardly paints Cardarine as a deadly carcinogen that we should all avoid at our peril.
Also, let's not forget the audience here. I imagine many of us, myself included, eat very healthy diets, packed with fruits, veg and other supplements that have been scientifically proven to reduce cancer risk, not to mention exercise itself! So if there is an unknown risk with Cardarine, there is every chance many of us are going above and beyond in everything else we do in our lifestyle choices to mitigate that risk to a considerable degree. Impossible to quantify that of course, but worth pointing out.
Also, if you actually read the studies that found no effect on cancer cells, and knew the limitations of an in vitro study, you'd see that they explicitly state:
this could also be due to the fact that these studies were performed in cell culture, which are not influenced by variables resulting from other cell types not found in an in vitro model.
There are a myriad of variables that may be present in vivo that simply don't exist in vitro, meaning you can't inherently extrapolate from an in vitro study to what will happen in vivo (that is in an actual living organism).
My friend, you're displaying a basic (but common) lack of understanding of basic scientific research principles.