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Peptide Forums (GHRH, Sermorelin, etc)
General Peptide Use & Information
Can certain peptides fix a damaged heart? Looking for a suggestion
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<blockquote data-quote="sammmy" data-source="post: 252333" data-attributes="member: 38594"><p>Heart rate and how strong your pulse feels are controlled not only by the physical parameters of your heart, but also by your autonomic nervous system and the blood pooling in your blood vessels. You mentioned in another thread that intestinal inflammation increases your pulse force. The inflammation increases the blood pooling in intestines (the largest pool) and it seems that it affects your perceived pulse strength, which suggests that the problem isn't the size of your heart.</p><p></p><p>Have you measured your blood pressure under calm conditions at home?</p><p>Best is in the morning after getting up before eating or drinking, since blood pressure decreases after meals and in the evening.</p><p></p><p>If you have a finger pulsemeter, you can check your autonomic system by sitting relaxed for a while and then suddenly rising - if in the following 5 mins your pulse jumps by more than 30 beats/minute, then you may have POTS which is disregulation of the autonomic nervous system.</p><p></p><p>Have you done a recent CBC with differential test, to see how your immune system is doing overall?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="sammmy, post: 252333, member: 38594"] Heart rate and how strong your pulse feels are controlled not only by the physical parameters of your heart, but also by your autonomic nervous system and the blood pooling in your blood vessels. You mentioned in another thread that intestinal inflammation increases your pulse force. The inflammation increases the blood pooling in intestines (the largest pool) and it seems that it affects your perceived pulse strength, which suggests that the problem isn't the size of your heart. Have you measured your blood pressure under calm conditions at home? Best is in the morning after getting up before eating or drinking, since blood pressure decreases after meals and in the evening. If you have a finger pulsemeter, you can check your autonomic system by sitting relaxed for a while and then suddenly rising - if in the following 5 mins your pulse jumps by more than 30 beats/minute, then you may have POTS which is disregulation of the autonomic nervous system. Have you done a recent CBC with differential test, to see how your immune system is doing overall? [/QUOTE]
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Peptide Forums (GHRH, Sermorelin, etc)
General Peptide Use & Information
Can certain peptides fix a damaged heart? Looking for a suggestion
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