DHEA article

Nightwanderer

Well-known member
Here's an article that views DHEA with some healthy skepticism, thought it might be worth a read. enjoy.

Invalid Link Removed
 
Here's an article that views DHEA with some healthy skepticism, thought it might be worth a read. enjoy.

Invalid Link Removed

Neither it's a natural compound in your body and has quite abundant amount of research behind it on healthy adults and those with medical issues.
 
In a study exploring DHEA-replacement therapy as a weight loss technique, researchers gave test animals large doses of both DHEA and the drug fenfluramine. According to Dr. Ray Sahelian's DHEA: A Practical Guide, "Even a hot fudge sundae with fresh bananas and dark chocolate syrup couldn't get [the test animals] interested." If you're like most sweet-toothed adults, you probably can't imagine not being interested in a hot fudge sundae. You're probably thinking, "There's something that can make me not interested in a hot fudge sundae? Give me some of that!" But if your taste buds haven't entirely taken over your mind, you might also be asking whether animals would normally be interested in a hot fudge sundae. Unlike the researchers, you might conclude that the animals' lack of interest in ice cream doesn't necessarily prove there are weight-loss properties in DHEA and fenfluramine.

Fenfluramine is the FEN in the drug Fen/Phen that was taken off the market because of heart valve damage. It's a racemic mixture of the levo- and dextro- enantiomers


Fenfluramine:
Invalid Link Removed
 
DHEA is taken for two valid reason (I talking regular DHEA here, not the recent DHEAs that act like test):

Guys over 50 often produce less and can use some minor supplementation, and to suppress cortisol. The dose is around 25 mg for both of these. Suppression of cortisol is one of the areas needed for weight loss.
 
The jury is still out on all that DHEA does, both good and bad. I wish people would, especially the medical media, stop trying to provide the final word on a hormone with hundreds of direct and indirect functions in the body.
 
Did nobody pick up the fact that an ingredient from a past anti-obesity drug (Fen/Phen) Fenfluramine is used in conjunction with DHEA? I cringe more at seeing trifluoromethyl in the nomenclature more than any makeup of any designer steroid out currently...

Hmm, taking a proven effective appetite reducing chemical WITH DHEA, and then when the rats don't go for food, all of a sudden coming to the conclusion it may be with the DHEA?? Really people??

That's like taking amphetamine salts and a vitamin together and saying the vitamin may have strong clean stimulating properties... just doesn't make sense to me.
 
Back
Top