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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone and Men's Health Articles
Endogenous circulating testosterone and sex hormone-binding globulin levels and measures of myocardial structure and function: the Framingham Heart
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<blockquote data-quote="Mountain Man" data-source="post: 138573" data-attributes="member: 14411"><p>Great post MM. There may be a confound in this study. I was born and raised in Framingham for the first 62 years of my life and the majority of the participants were of the generation that came of age in WWII. My father passed on the opportunity to be a part of it, but my uncle was in the study and died a few years ago at age 96. My dad died 2017 in his 94th year. Looking at pictures of my dad and uncle when they were younger, especially those taken of them in Europe during the war, you see a lean, hard look in face and muscle that doesn’t exist today. They ate clean, because that was the way everybody ate then, walked everywhere, did bodyweight exercise regularly and were innately tougher mentally and physically than people today. My dad was a combat veteran at age 22 and my uncle landed second day of the Normandy invasion. There were no endocrine disrupters, no excuses, no safe places to hide if your feelings were hurt. I have to think that I, and others raised by guys like these inherited a bit of their grit and determination. The offspring of these guys are my age now. I’m 65.</p><p></p><p>Do you think this could be a confounding factor in the results? I think that action creates good hormones and that action, especially in men, keeps testosterone levels high and healthy hearts.</p><p></p><p>As an aside, being a child and nephew of guys like these was one of the greatest happenstances of my life. I think of my dad and his 3 brothers every day when I need motivation to work, provide, and problem solve. Thanks for finding this.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mountain Man, post: 138573, member: 14411"] Great post MM. There may be a confound in this study. I was born and raised in Framingham for the first 62 years of my life and the majority of the participants were of the generation that came of age in WWII. My father passed on the opportunity to be a part of it, but my uncle was in the study and died a few years ago at age 96. My dad died 2017 in his 94th year. Looking at pictures of my dad and uncle when they were younger, especially those taken of them in Europe during the war, you see a lean, hard look in face and muscle that doesn’t exist today. They ate clean, because that was the way everybody ate then, walked everywhere, did bodyweight exercise regularly and were innately tougher mentally and physically than people today. My dad was a combat veteran at age 22 and my uncle landed second day of the Normandy invasion. There were no endocrine disrupters, no excuses, no safe places to hide if your feelings were hurt. I have to think that I, and others raised by guys like these inherited a bit of their grit and determination. The offspring of these guys are my age now. I’m 65. Do you think this could be a confounding factor in the results? I think that action creates good hormones and that action, especially in men, keeps testosterone levels high and healthy hearts. As an aside, being a child and nephew of guys like these was one of the greatest happenstances of my life. I think of my dad and his 3 brothers every day when I need motivation to work, provide, and problem solve. Thanks for finding this. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone and Men's Health Articles
Endogenous circulating testosterone and sex hormone-binding globulin levels and measures of myocardial structure and function: the Framingham Heart
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