I purchased a new bottle of Havoc from a widely known reputable source. But, the cap, capsules, and smell is a bit different. Didn't even have the plastic wrap on the bottle this time. What do you think?
Thats why im confused. Several people on similar forums have reported being prescribed "sarms". Ive seen MK-677 being allegedly prescribed a few times.
It looks like several people have been lucky enough to find a clinician open to prescribing SARMS. This is surprising to me as I thought these were research drugs. Which SARMs are available as a prescription?
I understand that MK677 stimulates IGF-1 secretion but does this take a few days to occur? Im taking it for the apetite effects but have yet to feel anything after 1 week. I have the liquid form from PP. Should I take it at a specific time or with food?
I pretty much said exactly what you said in your first paragraph, several times. Idk why this thread is getting to so many people.
Regarding your comment on law school and medschool...idk where youre getting this information but my PT school shares a curriculum with a med school and we...
Yes this is a good answer and sheds light on another consideration.
Test may be admistered differently in the clinic than 40mg a day for 6 weeks, therefore the negative feedback is different.
Yes, thats exactly what I tried to say several times but still faced strong antagonist comments.
I personally use PCT. I just want to know the discrepancy between this community and the medical community. IMO, it is because we havr different goals. The physician doesnt mind taking extra time to...
Negative feedback involves receptor kinetics. If you are implying that negative feedback does not, and therefore ANY exogenous hormone can cause full inhibition, you are denying dose dependent effects, which underminds receptor kinetics. My understanding of how negative feedback works is in...
In terms of using it, probably. In terms of understanding the physiology/molecular mechanisms behind it, no (as supported by this thread). Still yet to see a scientifically coherent explanation on this topic, yet a lot of people here are claiming to be scientific.
The difference is, your prescription may kill someone whereas the physicians PCT suggestion will cost you extra time (but it could still get you back to baseline)
Sure, just going through medical school doesn't mean you're impressive or intelligent. That was not my argument and I can attest to have interacted with some low IQ medical professionals. And sure, the BB community may have more experience with cycle regimens (for the purposes of bodybuilding)...
I don't think this is scientifically correct. Test is produced and then inhibited by several downstream products, if thats what you mean by pulsatile. The only other thing rhythmic/pulsatile about testosterone is related to the circadian rhythm, sleep cycles, etc. This involves different...
Thank you. I think I see the discrepancy. One community emphasizes re-establishing homeostasis/health. The other emphasizes doing it efficiently because gainz (the reason why we do it in the first place). It is therefore NOT the lack of knowledge of any party, but instead, different goals. With...
This puzzle piece doesn't fit. For exogenous products, at any level, to completely shut down any pathway, that would contradict Michaelis-Menten kinetics (pharmacokinetic concept). There would be no such thing as dose-dependency and enzyme/receptor saturation.
Tapering down follows these...
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