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Thread: estrogen and behaviour

  1. #1
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    estrogen and behaviour

    im on 200 mg trt weekly and last week i decide to check, do i convert to much test cause im about 18% bf
    and i found out that estradiol is times higher than normal.
    starting clen and var to get my bf down now.
    so the question is how higher estrogen/estradiol affects our behaviour?

  2. #2
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    I like that you still use the term BF for brown fat. There is no such thing. You have visceral fat and subcutaneous fat . The color dose not matter. Either its around internal organs or its not. High levels of estrogen can effect a male. You may convert anabolics to estrogen easier than most. Take an estrogen blocker to help with this. Some block estrogen an some inhibit the pick up by your receptors. You need to find which works better for you. I would not rely on clen and anavar for weight loss. You said nothing about diet and exercise. You should start with that then try the others.

  3. #3
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    There actually is a 'thing' called brown fat, or brown adipose tissue. Look it up, every person on the planet has some in their body, without it you will more than likely fall very very Ill.

    Have you looked at your diet for the BF% issue? I doubt it is the steroids.

  4. #4
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    Sorry im an Exercise Physiologist and in the medical community the tern brown fat is not used commonly. Human adults may have some brown fat "if thats what you want to call it" that type of tissue is most common in babbies and mammals such as seals, whales, polar bears, animals who depend on fat for heat productuion. I doubt you are a baby or an animal found in the artic so lets just say its fat.

  5. #5
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    You must be a misinformed Exercise Physiologist as you must have missed many of those new studies coming out proving that brown adipose tissue if found in ALL adults, but not to the extent it is in infants. It is found primarily in the liver and in the heart of adults and provides a vital role in the ATP or kers cycle and heat generation in those vital organs. Fat is not just fat, each fat type plays its vital role, its like saying oranges are apples. I'm not trying to make it sound like I'm attacking you, but as a man of science myself, i would like to talk science and fact.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by jlj6710 View Post
    I like that you still use the term BF for brown fat. There is no such thing. You have visceral fat and subcutaneous fat . The color dose not matter. Either its around internal organs or its not. High levels of estrogen can effect a male. You may convert anabolics to estrogen easier than most. Take an estrogen blocker to help with this. Some block estrogen an some inhibit the pick up by your receptors. You need to find which works better for you. I would not rely on clen and anavar for weight loss. You said nothing about diet and exercise. You should start with that then try the others.
    Dude what Fvck are you even talking about?? This guy said nothing about brown fat so why even bring it up and start a pointless debate on something that wasn't even mentioned! Quit highjacking threads!

    BF= Body Fat!! How long have you been into exercise science, 1st semester?

  7. #7
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    Maybe the OP does need stuff like clen,var or T3 to lose weight. Some people have a problem with mobilizing fat. There is a way to find out. There is this wall that you hit.

    If you have your carbs low so that your insulin is low, and you aren't displacing protein and essential fats, and you are lowering calories in general, plus exercise, one of 2 things will happen.

    One is that you keep losing fat and/or lose more fat as you lower intake and increase exercise. In that case there is no problem with mobilizing fat and you don't need to take anything, or don't need to yet.

    Two, rather than losing fat, you just get an increase in appetite and a reduced capacity to exercise. What happens here is your body is already giving you all the fat it can. This is the point where it has gotten to a very low level. This is because when you have a problem with fat mobilization, the amount of fat you can free from adipose tissue is directly proportional to the amount of that tissue you have. So in this case you do need to take something (T3 is great for this problem by the way). Then you are still reducing body fat through diet and exercise, you just take something which allows your body to mobilize as much fat as needed to make up for your energy deficit.

    So the things you take shouldn't be for doing the actual work. They should just be for making it possible.

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