Yea so 3 weeks of 2-3 IU s 8 months ago caused adapation to my body so now when I inject 6-8IU from the start I don't feel anything right, and this sound 100% like chatgpt wrote it lmao, "That isn't opinion, it's basics"
And my body somehow remained adapted 8 months later of not using GH and now even if I pin 4x the dose I don't feel anything hmm ok, or you re gonna say I have antibodies now
I didn't say it does, I said it's different, it's a probability it is bunk tho, or you trust these blackmarket bathtub GH vendors soo much because they test 1 vial out of 1 million at janoshik and then you pray yours is the same
Does your little brain comprehend what adaptation means? It shouldn't happen instantly, I didn't felt anything from the first 6IU dose then nothing from the subsequent 6 and 8 doses, or again you're saying the fact that I did GH for 3 weeks at a dose 3-4 times less 8 months ago means my body fully adapted to GH sides forever
And what exactly are those pharmacokinetics ? I take it at the same time, at a much bigger dosage
ok let me quote you
idiots like yourself argues one way then he finds out he proves my point argues the other way just so he can win the argument lmao
let's see what the chatgpt bot that you use and trained to just argue for you says about your statements
"It is a common misconception that "high-quality" pharmaceutical HGH shouldn't cause side effects. In reality, medical literature and clinical studies prove the exact opposite:
water retention is one of the most common and predictable physiological effects of real Somatropin, regardless of the brand's quality.
The argument that "side effects = bad quality" is medically incorrect. In fact, if someone takes a high dose of pharmaceutical HGH and feels
nothing (no joint tightness or slight water retention), it is often a sign the product is under-dosed or fake.
1. Does Pharma-Grade HGH Cause Water Retention?
Yes. Every major pharmaceutical brand (Norditropin, Genotropin, Humatrope, etc.) explicitly lists "peripheral edema" (swelling of the hands and feet) as a common side effect in their prescribing information.
- The Mechanism: HGH causes the kidneys to retain sodium and water by activating the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) and the sodium-potassium pump. This is a direct biological action of the growth hormone molecule itself, not a result of "impurities."
- The "Purity" Myth: In the 1980s, early HGH derived from cadavers had impurities that caused issues. Modern recombinant (rhGH) is over 99% pure. The water retention you feel today is the hormone working on your kidneys, not your body reacting to "dirty" fillers.
2. What the Studies Show
Clinical data shows that side effects are
highly dose-dependent.
- Low Dose (0.5 – 2.0 IU/day): Often used for anti-aging or GH deficiency. At this level, water retention is usually mild or non-existent in healthy individuals.
- Moderate Dose (4.0 – 6.0 IU/day): Frequently used by athletes. Studies show a significant increase in Extracellular Water (ECW) at these levels. In one study of healthy young adults taking supraphysiological doses, extracellular water increased by nearly 10% within weeks.
- High Dose (8.0+ IU/day): At these levels, the incidence of side effects like "moon face" (facial edema), carpal tunnel syndrome (from fluid pressing on the wrist nerves), and joint pain becomes nearly universal.
3. Dosage and Side Effect Relationships
The relationship is a classic
dose-response curve: the higher the dose, the more severe the side effects.
The "Sign of Quality": While extreme side effects aren't
desirable, the presence of mild water retention and carpal tunnel-like symptoms is actually a classic indicator that the HGH is biologically active."