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Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Nandrolone Issues
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<blockquote data-quote="Fortunate" data-source="post: 230761" data-attributes="member: 42264"><p>I respect your pain and wish you didn't have it, but the attitude that "<strong>more invasive the treatment, the more the doctor gets paid." </strong>is misguided and cynical. If your doctor is not a spine surgeon, then he or she gets paid zero dollars and zero cents for referring you to someone who can do an epidural injection. If you doctor is a spine, then he or she would make a whole lot more money operating on you then just injecting you. </p><p></p><p>If you do not trust the recommendations and/or opinions of your spine surgeon, then I suggest getting another one. By all means, you should empower yourself by learning and asking forum members what they think, but I is also important to trust the expert who most likely has your best interest in mind when giving recommendations. </p><p></p><p>I am not suggesting that nandrolone will solve all your problems. I am, however, suggesting that opioids will NOT. They will only cause more problems. Once you are no longer opioid naive, your receptors will regulate themselves, making it necessary to push the dose higher and higher to achieve the same pain relief. Along with that comes all sorts of issues, such as chronic constipation, testosterone suppression, not to mention physical dependance. </p><p></p><p>There is no personal judgment here - just what I believe to be true. If there is absolutely no option available, and opioids are literally the only way to have any quality of life, then maybe there's a role, but in my humble opinion, it should be a last resort.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fortunate, post: 230761, member: 42264"] I respect your pain and wish you didn't have it, but the attitude that "[B]more invasive the treatment, the more the doctor gets paid." [/B]is misguided and cynical. If your doctor is not a spine surgeon, then he or she gets paid zero dollars and zero cents for referring you to someone who can do an epidural injection. If you doctor is a spine, then he or she would make a whole lot more money operating on you then just injecting you. If you do not trust the recommendations and/or opinions of your spine surgeon, then I suggest getting another one. By all means, you should empower yourself by learning and asking forum members what they think, but I is also important to trust the expert who most likely has your best interest in mind when giving recommendations. I am not suggesting that nandrolone will solve all your problems. I am, however, suggesting that opioids will NOT. They will only cause more problems. Once you are no longer opioid naive, your receptors will regulate themselves, making it necessary to push the dose higher and higher to achieve the same pain relief. Along with that comes all sorts of issues, such as chronic constipation, testosterone suppression, not to mention physical dependance. There is no personal judgment here - just what I believe to be true. If there is absolutely no option available, and opioids are literally the only way to have any quality of life, then maybe there's a role, but in my humble opinion, it should be a last resort. [/QUOTE]
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Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Nandrolone Issues
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