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Author | Topic: E2's liver formula? |
matty Pro Bodybuilder (Total posts: 527) |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() would this formula of milk thistle and primrose etc. be needed at all for a eq/primo cycle???? ------------------ IP: Logged |
matty Pro Bodybuilder (Total posts: 527) |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() being that eq and primo are not liver toxic... IP: Logged |
matty Pro Bodybuilder (Total posts: 527) |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() bump IP: Logged |
matty Pro Bodybuilder (Total posts: 527) |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() C'mon guys, i just want to see if i could save myself 35 bucks a month on milk thistle and primrose!!!!! i know i should probably take it anyway, but do i really need to? ------------------ IP: Logged |
Checkmatebloated Pro Bodybuilder (Total posts: 99) |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Did you read my post about anavar and hepatitis? Toss in some anavar is helps the liver and forget the milk and prim on this cycle.\ Ain't is great to toss in some juice that is good for the liver. Really the research was the effects of anavar on the liver of drunks with hepatitis. It has no damaging effect. They were testing it to see if it would help the liver recover. IP: Logged |
matty Pro Bodybuilder (Total posts: 527) |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ill have to ck that out, a roid that is good for the liver hmmmmmmm! anyone else think i should toss the milk thistle and prim for this cycle?> ------------------ IP: Logged |
Checkmatebloated Pro Bodybuilder (Total posts: 99) |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Read all, but the drinking info is between the stars/. Oxandrolone (brand name Oxandrin(R); an earlier name, 'Anavar', is obsolete) is an oral anabolic steroid which is not primarily metabolized in the liver. It became available in the U.S. in December 1995. Anabolic agents work by promoting protein synthesis, and are one approach to the treatment of wasting syndrome, which involves an abnormal loss of protein and lean body mass. Oxandrolone was approved by the FDA more than 30 years ago, specifically for regaining weight lost due to infectious disease, among other uses. This approval -- "as adjunctive therapy to promote weight gain after weight loss following extensive surgery, chronic infections, or severe trauma, and in some patients who without definite pathophysiologic reasons fail to gain or to maintain normal weight" -- is still in force. But despite FDA approval, oxandrolone has long been unavailable in the U.S.; companies chose to drop it instead of meeting the increasing regulatory requirements for anabolic steroids, for a drug which was off-patent and therefore had a low profit margin. Now a small pharmaceutical company, Bio-Technology General Corp. (BTG), has reintroduced oxandrolone for weight gain, and is researching it for four indications for which the drug has orphan-drug status: AIDS wasting, alcoholic hepatitis, Turner's syndrome in girls, and constitutional delay of growth and puberty in boys. A recent Oxandrolone is relatively expensive, with price to wholesalers being $3.75 to $30 per day, depending on dose. This is a fraction of the cost of human growth hormone ($140/day or more to the patient), which is also used to treat this kind of AIDS-related weight loss due to unknown metabolic changes. The FDA approval for weight loss may help with insurance reimbursement. Much less expensive anabolic steroids are also available; some of them may be comparable to oxandrolone, except that they must be injected. (An early study, which measured anabolic activity by changes in nitrogen excretion in human subjects on a constant diet, found that oxandrolone had about six times the anabolic activity of the same amount of testosterone.(1)) The usual adult dose recommended in the package insert is one 2.5 mg tablet two to four times daily; but the instructions also note that doses as low as 2.5 mg per day or as high as 20 mg per day can be used. (Each 2.5 mg tablet costs $3.75 to the wholesalers.) As with other anabolic steroids, the package insert includes many cautions and warnings of possible adverse effects -- too many to summarize here.********************** But a major controlled study used four times the current approved oxandrolone dose in treating severe alcoholic hepatitis, and reported "no complications attributable to its use."(2)
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