PCT-SHOP Norma's Bloods

I personally think that you can't apply the 10X rule. Everyones body processes things differently. There are just too many different factors. However, people's numbers should still be within a certain range of each other's if running the same compound from the same company in which this case they are not.
 
@roastdawg Yeah, just once a week. I pinned a day early before the bloods because i wanted to have the bloods done 36 hours after injection and I only had one day I could go get them done. Still, I don't think one day early would make that much of a difference.
 
I think the theory has some truth to it, but there are just so many variables to take into consideration, like dosing once a week vs twice a week, size of the person, the persons metabolism, and so on. For instance when I was on methadone I had to get split dosing because every morning I would wake up dope sick. 95% of people could take methadone and not get dope sick for 2 to 4 days but not me. The doctors didn't believe me so they ran a serum level blood test on me and found out I was telling the truth.
Watson test cyp on my trt protocol yields a peak TT @~1200 48 hours after pinning 200 mg's. Mind you, this was once a week pinning. Not entirely sure how that comes into play.

Watson form CVS, by the way. Not "Watson"
 
People can say the 10x rule is unproven, lame or bullshit. But that isn't completely true-I tell you this, If your bloods come back 10x -You got GREAT juice! !
 
What the fuck why were your bloods so much better than mine? I think this whole 10x theory needs to be tested better. I got the same shit from the same guy and got 4x for a weekly dose and 8x after each pin

You may pin in a different location than OP does. You may pin more or less frequently than he does. You may have more or less hydrolyze enzymes than he does. You may have more or less total blood volume than he does. And any other number if factors. The 7-10x is a general statement that most will fall into provided you do exactly as the protocol states and even then there will still be outliers.
 
As far as the 10x rule goes, if you look at steady state blood levels of other drugs as a comparison, it doesn't really make sense. For example, if 100 people take the same exact dose of Tylenol for 10 days, the blood level would be all over the map in each persons blood. This is based on different rates of metabolism and elimination. Some people are genetically fast or slow metabolizers and this has a huge effect on blood levels. When you have a fat soluble drug that is slow release like a test ester the levels should be even more variable from person to person.

I think it's completely within reason that one person could have 10x and one person could have 4x on the same regimen.
 
Mind if I ask... Were you using a AI on that dose? I noticed e2 was up there. I bet you were expecting lower numbers so maybe didn't think it was necessary.
 
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