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General Health & Fitness
Pain Management Research
Osteoarthritis and adding nandrolone to TRT
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<blockquote data-quote="Pacman" data-source="post: 206322" data-attributes="member: 2450"><p>I have osteoarthitis in my shoulder. I have tried PRP ($1500), physical therapy ($1200), I modified several upper body exercises to work the muscles without heavily inflaming the current state of my shoulder (I get creative), I focus a ton on joint health (CARs, etc), and have found very temporary solutions for the pain itself that does still pop up at least 1-2 times a week despite all that (it used to be MUCH worse both in intensity and frequency!!).</p><p></p><p>I have been doing my best to research and reach firm conclusions regarding the efficacy of nandrolone and joint pain. I have so far been unsuccessful in reaching any confident conclusions on whether it works and if it does, HOW it works?</p><p></p><p>I have so many questions about it, namely:</p><p></p><p>1) Does it actually lubricate the joint with synovial fluid? Or does it work in another way? </p><p></p><p>2) Is it healthy long term? </p><p></p><p>3) Is it okay to take even if you take oxandrolone as well? Or would the potential cardio risks of the combo completely outweigh the benefits?</p><p></p><p>4) Does it help with ALL types of joint pain? There are so many reasons joints can hurt. They could be: bad repetitive motions, tendinopathy, osteoarthritis (degradation of the cartilage), rheumatoid arthritis, torn labrums, injured minisci, etc etc.. Surely not all these different causes of joint pain have one solution like nandrolone? Can they?</p><p></p><p>I see conflicting information online the world over. And it is driving me crazy. </p><p></p><p><strong>On the one hand, I see this optimistic research paper: </strong>[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7108994/[/URL]</p><p></p><p>That is until I read this conclusion at the end:</p><p></p><p>So out of 48 subjects, 5 of them reported back improvements on joint pain.</p><p></p><p><strong>And then I see what this university source says: </strong>[URL unfurl="true"]https://liinc.bme.columbia.edu/how-does-nandrolone-decanoate-help-joints-and-ligaments/[/URL]</p><p></p><p>They claim that it increases synovial fluid in the joints (but don't give a source), and that nandrolone actually INCREASES risk of injury. (They quoted a research paper but again, they didn't link a source!!!).</p><p></p><p>So it makes me wonder, what info is accurate? How can there be such conflicting reputable sources of info?</p><p></p><p><strong>And a question for any of you here who have used nandrolone successfully to assist with joint pain</strong>, <strong>what was the source of your joint pain (tendon injury, ostoearthritis, etc)? How long did it take to work and what was your protocol? Any sides to speak of? Was it worth it?</strong></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Pacman, post: 206322, member: 2450"] I have osteoarthitis in my shoulder. I have tried PRP ($1500), physical therapy ($1200), I modified several upper body exercises to work the muscles without heavily inflaming the current state of my shoulder (I get creative), I focus a ton on joint health (CARs, etc), and have found very temporary solutions for the pain itself that does still pop up at least 1-2 times a week despite all that (it used to be MUCH worse both in intensity and frequency!!). I have been doing my best to research and reach firm conclusions regarding the efficacy of nandrolone and joint pain. I have so far been unsuccessful in reaching any confident conclusions on whether it works and if it does, HOW it works? I have so many questions about it, namely: 1) Does it actually lubricate the joint with synovial fluid? Or does it work in another way? 2) Is it healthy long term? 3) Is it okay to take even if you take oxandrolone as well? Or would the potential cardio risks of the combo completely outweigh the benefits? 4) Does it help with ALL types of joint pain? There are so many reasons joints can hurt. They could be: bad repetitive motions, tendinopathy, osteoarthritis (degradation of the cartilage), rheumatoid arthritis, torn labrums, injured minisci, etc etc.. Surely not all these different causes of joint pain have one solution like nandrolone? Can they? I see conflicting information online the world over. And it is driving me crazy. [B]On the one hand, I see this optimistic research paper: [/B][URL unfurl="true"]https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7108994/[/URL] That is until I read this conclusion at the end: So out of 48 subjects, 5 of them reported back improvements on joint pain. [B]And then I see what this university source says: [/B][URL unfurl="true"]https://liinc.bme.columbia.edu/how-does-nandrolone-decanoate-help-joints-and-ligaments/[/URL] They claim that it increases synovial fluid in the joints (but don't give a source), and that nandrolone actually INCREASES risk of injury. (They quoted a research paper but again, they didn't link a source!!!). So it makes me wonder, what info is accurate? How can there be such conflicting reputable sources of info? [B]And a question for any of you here who have used nandrolone successfully to assist with joint pain[/B], [B]what was the source of your joint pain (tendon injury, ostoearthritis, etc)? How long did it take to work and what was your protocol? Any sides to speak of? Was it worth it?[/B] [/QUOTE]
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Osteoarthritis and adding nandrolone to TRT
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