I believe this is true but also dose dependent. I am going to look for the study now, but if I remember correctly, it was at levels of 200mg Test/week or more that collagen synthesis slows.
OK, now that I spent some time searching for the original study/article, I see that the above was 'bro science' repeated on various forums rather than info from a valid study.
Same here I couldn't find any study but I thought the "bro science" is above 250mg per week.I believe this is true but also dose dependent. I am going to look for the study now, but if I remember correctly, it was at levels of 200mg Test/week or more that collagen synthesis slows.
OK, now that I spent some time searching for the original study/article, I see that the above was 'bro science' repeated on various forums rather than info from a valid study.
This would be a good question for Dr. Saya to weigh in on next time he is on the forum.
I have read in multiple places the Nandrolone Decanoate (Deca Durabolin), even in low doses, is good for collagen protein synthesis and tissue repair (as low as 100mg/week). Can anyone confirm??
I have read in multiple places the Nandrolone Decanoate (Deca Durabolin), even in low doses, is good for collagen protein synthesis and tissue repair (as low as 100mg/week). Can anyone confirm??
Many on this forum use nandrolone in therapeutic doses in conjunction with testosterone without issueIf you want your **** to never get hard again...then by all means use deca.
I think that would depend on your condition your prescribed nandrolone for and DR's discretion but typically up to the same MG per week as your TRT dose or less.PAUL-E.......what is considered a therapeutic dose for men also on TRT?
This would be a good question for Dr. Saya to weigh in on next time he is on the forum.
In other words as long as your on therapeutic doses in physiologic ranges you should be okI haven't seen any conclusive data suggesting physiologic testosterone doses have any negative impact on collagen synthesis. Further, I haven't observed anything clinically/anecdotally in our vast patient base to suggest same.