m_ob
New Member
Yeah, 500 Iu a week. Last time I checked HDL and LDL were good, total cholesterol was low though, 91
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Another question on appetite, I've got 2 100 ml vials of Agrilab vet grade B complex. A lot of it for only 8 bucks. Each ml contains: 100 mg of B1, 5 mg of B2, 100 mg of niacinamidee, 10 mg B6, and 100 mcg of B12. How much B12 do I need a week?
Calm down bax. I'm taking all the advice I've been given, except for HANs senseless babble. I'm going on a week and a half without lifting now so we'll see how this goes. I got recent labs in the mail today though: TSH: 1.008 Sodium 143 (136-145). Potassium 4.1 (3.5-5.1). Chloride 105. (98-107). Co2- 33 ( 23-29). HIGH. Creatine: 1.04. (.6-1.3). BUN 17. (7-18). Glucose 86. (70-100). Calcium 9.6 8.5-10.5
There’s probably nothing wrong when the carbon dioxide level is just a point or two outside of the normal range. That’s particularly true if your test turned up abnormal on otherwise routine blood work.
This raises an interesting question: What defines an abnormal result on a lab test? Some tests are abnormal because there is a clear link between that result and a known health condition. For example, high levels of lead in the bloodstream are known to produce lead poisoning.
But for other tests the normal range is determined statistically by performing the test in a large population. The average value, plus a certain buffer zone, defines what is normal. For those trained in statistics, this buffer is typically two standard deviations on either side of the mean.
For example, the normal range for carbon dioxide is calculated by looking at average levels in a large group of otherwise healthy people. The bottom line: “Abnormal” means you are not in the average range. But it doesn’t always mean there is problem. Some healthy people will simply have carbon dioxide levels that are slightly higher or lower than average.
Another quirky statistical fact is that a typical person is likely to have one or more “abnormal” values when they have a large number of blood tests. Simply put, it is hard to be average on every test. It may be alarming to see an “abnormal” label on one of your test results. But you can rest assured that this may simply be — well, normal.
Wild goose chases are.medically validate with clinical testing ordered from the MD's. Its kind of.entertaining to.watch guys complain of how they can't gain muscle or.your dick don't work. Think about all the.people who are dying of cancer, have no.dick because they.lost.it.due.to.a roadside bombing or.have blown off.limbs, sitting in.hospice. Until you have face death in.the face one.will.understand how trivial these.issues are..
