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Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Does nandrolone contribute to (or cause) depression?
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<blockquote data-quote="Guided_by_Voices" data-source="post: 232818" data-attributes="member: 15235"><p>A few thoughts,</p><p></p><p>I don’t have any magic answer but an inversion table helped my back/neuro pain a lot, however my issue was in my lower back.</p><p></p><p>For my shoulders, my rehab consisted of: very light movements to get blood in the joint that produced no pain, mobility work, partial range of motion work through a range of motion that did not hurt, use of single-arm dumbbells to work my good shoulder without stress on my bad shoulder, BPC, TB500, DMSO, GH stimulating compounds, IR light/heat, not sleeping on my bad shoulder, fanatical attention to form, praying for wisdom, and time. I don’t know what the exact issue was but it seemed to be the same in both shoulders (at different times). Thankfully, the first shoulder I injured is at 99% and the other is back to 90%. It took longer for me to get range of motion back than for the pain to recede. I do all forms of shoulder movements, presses, pulls, etc. with the exception of overhead squats which I have never had the flexibility to do.</p><p></p><p>I would not even consider back squats in your situation. I did them for many years and in retrospect, there is nothing they did that a combination of front squats, leg presses, step-ups, hip-belt squats, trap bar deadlifts, and leg curls/extensions won’t do, but with much lower risk to the spine, knees and shoulders.</p><p></p><p>In your situation, I would be concerned about the N masking the pain. Even with Ibuprofen, I had to be very careful not to re-injure myself and you likely want some pain signals as a warning.</p><p></p><p>Regarding TB500, AFAIK the cancer concern is related to its promotion of new blood vessel growth and its use in cancer cells, however as a naturally occurring compound, cancer is able to up-regulate both of those whether you supplement with it or not. That said, I would try other things first. Whatever the solution is, it is likely a combination of things</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Guided_by_Voices, post: 232818, member: 15235"] A few thoughts, I don’t have any magic answer but an inversion table helped my back/neuro pain a lot, however my issue was in my lower back. For my shoulders, my rehab consisted of: very light movements to get blood in the joint that produced no pain, mobility work, partial range of motion work through a range of motion that did not hurt, use of single-arm dumbbells to work my good shoulder without stress on my bad shoulder, BPC, TB500, DMSO, GH stimulating compounds, IR light/heat, not sleeping on my bad shoulder, fanatical attention to form, praying for wisdom, and time. I don’t know what the exact issue was but it seemed to be the same in both shoulders (at different times). Thankfully, the first shoulder I injured is at 99% and the other is back to 90%. It took longer for me to get range of motion back than for the pain to recede. I do all forms of shoulder movements, presses, pulls, etc. with the exception of overhead squats which I have never had the flexibility to do. I would not even consider back squats in your situation. I did them for many years and in retrospect, there is nothing they did that a combination of front squats, leg presses, step-ups, hip-belt squats, trap bar deadlifts, and leg curls/extensions won’t do, but with much lower risk to the spine, knees and shoulders. In your situation, I would be concerned about the N masking the pain. Even with Ibuprofen, I had to be very careful not to re-injure myself and you likely want some pain signals as a warning. Regarding TB500, AFAIK the cancer concern is related to its promotion of new blood vessel growth and its use in cancer cells, however as a naturally occurring compound, cancer is able to up-regulate both of those whether you supplement with it or not. That said, I would try other things first. Whatever the solution is, it is likely a combination of things [/QUOTE]
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Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Does nandrolone contribute to (or cause) depression?
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