bigpmp said:My wife is pregnant. She found some Kynoselen and a vial of EQ. She told me that what ever I put into my body goes into her body and then into my kid. I never thought of it that way. Is she nuts or does this have some validity? I don't want ot hurt my kid. I will wait the remaining 7 months before going "on" if i need to. Any help with this would be appreciated.
She's nuts. Your kid is safe. I don't think anyone can argue that a few NANOGRAMS of testosterone are going to affect your wife. And by what mechanism would the few nanograms of testosterone get into her blood stream and circulate to your kid?
And the concept of a few nanograms of steroids, which includes your natural testosterone, being ejaculated into her and then somehow being absorbed into her blood stream and affecting your unborn kid, is something only a science fiction writer could consider plausible... or the typical, illogical female brain.
MaxRep
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Arch Androl. 2002 May-Jun;48(3):225-32.
Seminal plasma melatonin and gonadal steroids concentrations in normal men.
Luboshitzky R, Shen-Orr Z, Herer P.
Endocrine Institute, Haemek Medical Center, Afula, Israel. luboshitzky_rclalit.org.il
The authors determined semen quality and the concentrations of estradiol, testosterone, and melatonin in blood and seminal plasma of 8 normal men. To investigate the reproducibility of these parameters, semen analysis and hormone concentrations were determined on 3 occasions, 6 weeks apart.
All 8 men had normal semen analysis. Blood melatonin (9.7-45.4 pg/mL) and testosterone (3.5-12.3 ng/mL) levels were significantly higher than the comparable seminal plasma levels (0.6-5.0 pg/mL, p <.02; 0.1-0.9 ng/mL, p <.0001, respectively).
Seminal plasma estradiol levels (46.9-91.3 pg/mL) were significantly higher than the blood levels (13.3-44.7 pg/mL) (p <.0001). The intraindividual variations in seminal plasma estradiol levels ranged between 8.7 and 13.8%. There was no correlation between sperm concentration, motility or morphology and blood or seminal plasma hormone levels. Also, blood and seminal plasma hormone levels were not correlated. These results indicate that in normospermic men seminal plasma estradiol levels are higher than blood hormone levels, suggesting local production of estradiol. This may imply that estrogen and/or the balance andorgen/estrogen is important in normal human spermatogenesis.
PMID: 11964216
