So it has finally happened. The unthinkable has become the reality.
I
Am
Lactating...
I am on 20mg of mk677 a day, 10mg twice a day. I noticed some wetness on my beater as i was laying in bed and proceeded to squeeze the nipple. A very small drop of clear fluid came out.
So beware fellas. Mk677 raises prolactin to some serious levels (and my estro is in check, i am off everything, relying on my measly testes for testosterone production).
Estrogen control wont help here. Upping my inhibit p as of next morning,
MK will not raise prolactin to anywhere near the degree necessary for causing lactation. If you are genuinely lactating, there are underlying issues. MK could be a partial contributer (i.e the straw that broke the camel's back), but it is not potent enough on its own to cause this.
Clinical studies have clearly shown the degree to which MK (and other GH secretagogues) raise prolactin levels...and it is not far cry from the levels required for stimulating milk production. It's not even close. Aside from directly testing the prolactin levels of 100's of test subjects over numerous studies, not a single person (man or women) experienced lactation from MK administration. This is exactly what should be happening, given the exceedingly small increase in prolactin seen with MK usage.
Lastly, it is not uncommon for men to see tiny droplets of clear fluid come out of their nipples if they are squeezed hard enough. I remember the first time I used testosterone and started to get gyno (I was only in the intial swelling stages, but I didn't know that at the time). I was worried about it, so I sarted squeezing my nipples...and lo and behind, out came a tiny amount of clear fluid. Lab work revealed completely normal prolactin levels. In the decades since then I have spoken to numerous guys who have done this same thing...and like myself, they al thought they were lactating. None were.
I am not saying this is what happened with you, but I am saying that MK is not capable of causing hyperprolactinemia severe enough to induce lactation on its own. It's just not. Like I said above, clinical trials (as well as 1,000's of anecdotal reports) have revealed this.
If you are indeed beginning to lactate, there are underlying/previous issues at play here. Go and get some bloodwork if you're concerned. This will reveal what is really going on internally..and if prolactin is elevated to the degree necessary for inducing lactation, the doctor can then begin look into the underlying/root cause.