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Expert Interviews
Interview with Dr Ranjith Ramasamy- Author of Estradiol Papers
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<blockquote data-quote="DS3" data-source="post: 175793" data-attributes="member: 18514"><p>In the first interview with Nelson, Dr. Ramasamy said that 1 mg ED and potentially 1 mg EOD could contribute to osteoporosis, but that can only be confirmed via a DEXA scan. However, what was continually referred to in the video was that creating an atmosphere in the body where 'negligible' amounts of E2 are maintained by anastrozole (ab)use is what largely contributes to osteoporosis. </p><p></p><p>However, I hypothesize that this may not be totally correct as I have suffered severely in the past by taking 0.25 mg adex 3 x per week and keeping my E2 at 20 pg/mL (not negligile). During that time my bones and joints hurt so bad I could barely workout, and years later have still not recovered very well. This is part of the reason i place emphasis on the proposed question because I am not the only TRT patient this has happened to, nor will I be the last. </p><p></p><p>Note that the dosage I had to take to experience profound negative effects on my bones and joints (that 3 years later i still haven't fully recovered from) is far less than the dosage that Dr. Ramasamy said he typically prescribes for high E2 (1 mg weekly or twice weekly).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DS3, post: 175793, member: 18514"] In the first interview with Nelson, Dr. Ramasamy said that 1 mg ED and potentially 1 mg EOD could contribute to osteoporosis, but that can only be confirmed via a DEXA scan. However, what was continually referred to in the video was that creating an atmosphere in the body where 'negligible' amounts of E2 are maintained by anastrozole (ab)use is what largely contributes to osteoporosis. However, I hypothesize that this may not be totally correct as I have suffered severely in the past by taking 0.25 mg adex 3 x per week and keeping my E2 at 20 pg/mL (not negligile). During that time my bones and joints hurt so bad I could barely workout, and years later have still not recovered very well. This is part of the reason i place emphasis on the proposed question because I am not the only TRT patient this has happened to, nor will I be the last. Note that the dosage I had to take to experience profound negative effects on my bones and joints (that 3 years later i still haven't fully recovered from) is far less than the dosage that Dr. Ramasamy said he typically prescribes for high E2 (1 mg weekly or twice weekly). [/QUOTE]
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Expert Interviews
Interview with Dr Ranjith Ramasamy- Author of Estradiol Papers
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