Pacman
Active Member
I'm just curious, as I've been doing a lot of reading on the different esters of T injection formulas. I understand that the release time is dependent on the number of carbon molecules surrounding the actual testosterone (cypionate = ~10 molecules, enanthate = ~8, Prop = ~3 - with each molecule breakdown being one day or so. These are the approximations I read on the internet). So my understanding is that the body breaks down the ester surrounding the T, and only then releases the testosterone. So how do esters with longer break down times (i.e. more molecules surrounding the T) ALSO ensure that the release of T is slow and not just all at once? Is it more like E-T-E-T rather than E-E-E-T-T-T? (i.e. small amount of ester breaks down, small amount of T released, then more ester, then more T, etc OR ester molecules break down, then T gets released)
I am just really curious as to how that works. I do not have much knowledge or education in chemistry/biology, but how is it that the T doesn't get released all at once, once the body breaks down the ester? The breakdown of the ester and release of the testosterone obviously works in a different way than what I assume it does, so can someone explain it to me, or direct me to a source where I can learn the answer to my question?
I am just really curious as to how that works. I do not have much knowledge or education in chemistry/biology, but how is it that the T doesn't get released all at once, once the body breaks down the ester? The breakdown of the ester and release of the testosterone obviously works in a different way than what I assume it does, so can someone explain it to me, or direct me to a source where I can learn the answer to my question?
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