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    Haidut is poisoning our balls with dogshit solvents?! these solvents instead mog? find out in the next episode of dragonball Z

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    • lobotomizeL
      lobotomize @hwisdom
      last edited by

      @hwisdom dhea sensitizes estrogen receptor and increases expression of EstrogReceptoralpha

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      • MauritioM
        Mauritio @CrumblingCookie
        last edited by

        @CrumblingCookie said in Haidut is poisoning our balls with dogshit solvents?! these solvents instead mog? find out in the next episode of dragonball Z:

        Also, IME with lanolin there's strong variance wrt to the steroid (precursor) composition of the respective product: It seems lanolin product can differ enormously in their compositions with some of them having considerably stronger direct estrogenic activity!

        Do you have a source for that as well ?

        Dare to think.

        My X:
        x.com/Metabolicmonstr

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        • MauritioM
          Mauritio @CrumblingCookie
          last edited by

          @CrumblingCookie said in Haidut is poisoning our balls with dogshit solvents?! these solvents instead mog? find out in the next episode of dragonball Z:

          IMO the use of transdermal precursors in men past the short term is a really dodgy business.

          Why ? You're simply giving the precursor. Do you have any papers at hand that explain that afurther ?

          Dare to think.

          My X:
          x.com/Metabolicmonstr

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          • C
            CrumblingCookie @CrumblingCookie
            last edited by CrumblingCookie

            @Mauritio

            In the medium term the effects and result turn very bad and sour for reasons I cannot explain but only report.

            It seems lanolin product can differ enormously in their compositions with some of them having considerably stronger direct estrogenic activity

            For that I only have own experience and a collection of notes I loosely took from various papers, i.e. lanolin composition differs widely between different sheep breeds and their origins.
            For some basic comparability and reliability it should therefore be important to only use a lanolin product as clean and refined as possible. It's hard to tell in advance. Maybe you'd notice a slight individual preference by smelling differenct products or another kind of intuition. With such high variability and tiny doses to take effects there's really little possibility to resort to lab analysis for such generic cosmetic raw ingredients.
            When you think about it, lanolin contains a wide range of sterol esters beside cholesterol (which is only one among many, many). It'd be highly likely and natural for some of them, or other inclusions, to have a degree of hormonal activity of their own.

            Apart from that I can only refer to an older post by miquelangeles on the prior RPF:


            "Also, I don't like lanolin any more. It has a too strong effect on me and I think some of its compounds have a direct hormonal effect themselves, before any conversion takes place.
            I find iberian pig lard much better, or any lard from pasture raised pigs. Wild boar lard should be interesting too.
            Cholesterol is the main sterol in both lard and tallow and it is highest in lard. (0.37–0.42% in lard, 0.08–0.14% in beef tallow, and 0.23–0.31% in mutton tallow).
            In traditional cultures like India, lard has been used by men topically in combination with garlic juice.
            It is best if the pig is male and not castrated. That's why wild boar lard should be better but there's no way to know the gender unless you hunt it yourself and render the fat. Testosterone esters accumulate in fat. In the fat of rats for example, testosterone averages 9 ng/g. Fat from female rats or castrated mal rats has no detectable testosterone."

            The gender-specific source selection was an interesting idea of him. The closer the topical application to male reproductive organs the more crucial this whole conundrum becomes, I'd say. It's safe to assume that commercial lanolin stems almost exclusively from female animals.

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