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Health & Wellness
Sermorelin
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<blockquote data-quote="BigTex" data-source="post: 224183" data-attributes="member: 43589"><p>Yes, GHRP blunts somatostatin. So when you do growth hormone injections, IGF-1 rises which signals somatostatin to increase causing you natural GH to eventually shut down. Taking a GHRP with the GH can help avoid your natural GH shutting down and actually give you a little boost. Somatostatin, is part of a negative feedback loop which is also involved in thyroid stimulating hormone, cholecystokinin, glucagon and insulin. </p><p></p><p>I know there are a few drugs that are used as somatostatin inhibitors but I am not aware of any supplements that do this. Some claim that choline based supplements like Phosphatidylcholine or Alpha GPC or CDP-choline will do the job but I am not aware of any evidence. In your case I would only make advice from medical doctors well educated in bipolar issues. Most all of our hormones are tied together in a huge feedback loop. Altering one may interfere with so many others.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BigTex, post: 224183, member: 43589"] Yes, GHRP blunts somatostatin. So when you do growth hormone injections, IGF-1 rises which signals somatostatin to increase causing you natural GH to eventually shut down. Taking a GHRP with the GH can help avoid your natural GH shutting down and actually give you a little boost. Somatostatin, is part of a negative feedback loop which is also involved in thyroid stimulating hormone, cholecystokinin, glucagon and insulin. I know there are a few drugs that are used as somatostatin inhibitors but I am not aware of any supplements that do this. Some claim that choline based supplements like Phosphatidylcholine or Alpha GPC or CDP-choline will do the job but I am not aware of any evidence. In your case I would only make advice from medical doctors well educated in bipolar issues. Most all of our hormones are tied together in a huge feedback loop. Altering one may interfere with so many others. [/QUOTE]
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Sermorelin
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