
Originally Posted by
RangerDanger830
This is a pretty outrageous claim to state it mildly. I am going to debunk this in the hopes that no one will read this post and use it as justification to make a bad decision. OP, please listen and understand that there are a lot of factors in play here but I will break it down best I can.
First of all, your early statement that the government took our right away to utilize a hormone our body produces may be true. Sure, you can't take synthetic testosterone without a prescription, yet we produce it normally. You're right there. However, your logic is completely flawed. Whether something is synthesized naturally in our bodies or elsewhere has little to no relationship with how toxic it is. Most of the time toxicity is dose dependent and dependent on where in the body the chemical is put, for example stomach bile being placed in your cranium would be very bad, yet our bodies produce it. Would you down some formaldehyde? We produce it naturally as well among many other toxic chemicals, we just don't produce enough to harm ourselves typically.
Next you compare steroid overdose with Tylenol and many other drug overdoses. I just want to clarify that you are probably referring to anabolic steroids as there are many types of steroids out there. Hell, cholesterol is a modified steroid. So, let us mention briefly an overdose of Tylenol, which I have seen and treated many times personally. Many things will happen but a few include stomach pain from excessive cyclooxygenase inhibition and pH changes and since it is metabolized mainly in the liver that is going to cause some issues there as well. I would expect stomach pain, nausea, pain in your upper right quadrant as well, and quite a bit of vomiting and sweating. You're going to naturally have some pallor too.
Now there are two issues with your argument here, one being your comparing of let's say Testosterone overdose to Tylenol. Assuming you manage to overdose on Test proportionately there are still serious side effects you could encounter to include serious edema, heart complications, and vision and other neurological effects to include temporary blindness. That sounds just as dangerous as Tylenol if you ask me, I wouldn't want to overdose on either.
Then the second fallacy in that statement concerns the fact that your argument fails to address the side effects when taking into account the doses and time we typically use for each. An average weekly dose of Testosterone per week that we recommend is generally around 500mg/week. Tylenol a day if taken constantly in my state is 3,000-4,000mg, which is about 28,000mg a week, or 28g. Now, I would like for you to imagine a group of people taking 28g of Tylenol a week spread out evenly for any number of weeks. Keep in mind they are spreading their dose of Tylenol out evenly throughout the week. Then take a group of people who take 500mg of Test E/week, and they are not spreading their dose out evenly. They are taking it all at once, something you could not do with Tylenol because of why? Its safety compared to Test? Also keep in mind the doses I am comparing are on the high end of Tylenol's range and the lower end of Test's range, people safely take much more Test a week.
After any random number of weeks I want you to compare the side effects after going cold turkey. This leads me to your next fallacy, the fact that you aren't taking time into account. Regardless, after you stop taking Testosterone you are going to have a long-term shut down of your HPTA, you won't see that with Tylenol. What are the long-term effects of HPTA shutdown? Well, you can google that one. You also run the risk of it being hindered indefinitely.
Going in chronological order of your initial post I now want to tell you that a possible headache is sure as hell not the only side effect you will see from injecting 10ml of Testosterone. Never mind the fact that you didn't even list a drug concentration in that 10ml.
Tylenol does not "burn a hole in your stomach." Tylenol inhibits the action of cyclooxygenase. This molecule acts in the inflammatory process. However, another version of the COX enzyme provides protection for the digestive tract. Tylenol simply keeps COX from protecting your GI tract as much, and it isn't the only mechanism for protection at that. It does not burn a hole in anything.
I am not entirely sure you wrote this yourself OP, or if you got it from the link that appears to be broken. However, I will say that whoever wrote this has little to no grasp of the concepts they are discussing. The moment I saw the word opinion in the reference link I would have approached with caution.
This is coming from someone who does have a grasp of these concepts, extensive education on the subject, and experience with both compounds so please disregard this terrible opinion. Also, keep in mind that a lot of these statements are situational and both the original and my comparison are vague at best.