AAS induced Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH)?

mattox

New Member
Fellow junkies (that's a joke!),
Anyone ever experience BPH or extremely weak flow that you can directly attribute to your cycle?

I'm 50, so I know this is a normal(ish) part of male aging; however, I've never really had a problem with this unless I take Pseudoephedrine Hydrochloride.

I'm running 420mg Test C and 140mg Tren E./week and 4IUs hGH/day. I do take 5mg Tadalafil/day.

The following is from using Grok with DeepSerach. Since human studies are limited, I figured this group of self-experimenters might have some information.

Key Points​

  • Research suggests that using anabolic-androgenic steroids (AAS) may induce Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH), but the evidence is limited and not conclusive.
  • A pilot study on one athlete showed AAS use increased prostate size and caused urinary symptoms similar to BPH.
  • Animal studies, like those on rats, also indicate AAS can lead to prostate changes resembling BPH, but human data is scarce.
  • More research is needed to confirm this link, and the topic remains debated due to limited studies.
 
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Yes i have BPH and have been diagnosed it for 8 years now. Current age 55.

HGh is a known irritant for me. Other ASS I am sure could do the same. The last 8 years I have taken nothing without doctor approval and knowledge.

Best wishes.
 
@pigeonhed I'm sorry to hear that, brother. Thank you for the response. I completely forgot to add that I'm also taking 4IUs of hGH/day (updated my original post to include that). Wonder what Grok can turn up on that?
 
@pigeonhed and anyone coming later, these are the Key Points returned by Grok regarding hGH and BPH. The combination with Testosterone has me interested. I need to look into that more:

Key Points​

  • Research suggests there is no direct evidence that human growth hormone (hGH) causes Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH).
  • hGH may influence prostate growth, especially when combined with testosterone, but this does not necessarily lead to BPH.
  • The topic remains understudied, with limited specific research linking hGH to BPH, and more studies are needed to clarify any potential relationship.
 
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