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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone and Men's Health Articles
Testosterone and prosocial behavior
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<blockquote data-quote="Seagal" data-source="post: 277269" data-attributes="member: 45300"><p>Didn't read the whole article. Didn't expect much of it.</p><p>[USER=43589]@BigTex[/USER] I didn't understand the title of the article in the sense that testosterone is linked to abnormal aggression or roid rage.</p><p>What changes in the brain when a person goes from eugonadal to hypogonadal? My I idea was that "having no drive" and "being more assertive (aggressive)" lie on a spectrum controlled by the same parameters. That's what I'm interested in.</p><p></p><p>However, i believe that it is possible that a cocktail of certain PEDs can cause imbalances in the brain in some individuals which can manifest in different psychiatric ways. I would even go further... not all otherwise healthy males can tolerate exogenous super superphysiological doses of testosterone without neurological/psychological side effects.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Seagal, post: 277269, member: 45300"] Didn't read the whole article. Didn't expect much of it. [USER=43589]@BigTex[/USER] I didn't understand the title of the article in the sense that testosterone is linked to abnormal aggression or roid rage. What changes in the brain when a person goes from eugonadal to hypogonadal? My I idea was that "having no drive" and "being more assertive (aggressive)" lie on a spectrum controlled by the same parameters. That's what I'm interested in. However, i believe that it is possible that a cocktail of certain PEDs can cause imbalances in the brain in some individuals which can manifest in different psychiatric ways. I would even go further... not all otherwise healthy males can tolerate exogenous super superphysiological doses of testosterone without neurological/psychological side effects. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone and Men's Health Articles
Testosterone and prosocial behavior
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