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  • fever - pain and swelling

    If this happens most people believe there injects are contaminated with bacteria. That is of course a possibility but it can also have a pyrogen (endotoxin) inside.

    But sometimes the body releases a (endogeneous) pyrogen. An allergic reaction is also possible just like a allergic reaction on one of the solvents, perservatives and..acids or estrifications.

    It takes longer before the new website is ready, therefore we will start with examples and discussion in the fora to start , and hopefully pleasure you guys.

    A gave an example of estrification allergic reactions here:
    http://juicedmuscle.com/showthread.p...neza-boldenone

  • #2
    Good post Ronny T.. Also ( just to add to the info ).. Alot of peeps think that Test flu is caused by the the flu virus, it's not .. . A rapid spike in testosterone levels especially in the case of using high doses of short estered compounds. They cause the body to treat all of this testosterone, ( or really whatever your using tren ,deca ) in the blood steam as a foreign body. Hence the flu like symptoms. And that in short is why it happens .

    Merc

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Merc. View Post
      Good post Ronny T.. Also ( just to add to the info ).. Alot of peeps think that Test flu is caused by the the flu virus, it's not .. . A rapid spike in testosterone levels especially in the case of using high doses of short estered compounds. They cause the body to treat all of this testosterone, ( or really whatever your using tren ,deca ) in the blood steam as a foreign body. Hence the flu like symptoms. And that in short is why it happens .

      Merc
      Some old studies, thats why those high dosed UGlab substances cause fever, some don't but do they contain the lable claimed dose?
      Studies on steroid fever: I. Production of leukocyte pyrogen in vitro by etiocholanolone
      Phyllis Bodel and Morris Dillard Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut Published January 1, 1968

      When a serum-buffer solution of etiocholanolone is incubated with human blood leukocytes in vitro, a pyrogen is released. Like endogenous pyrogen of leukocyte origin, this pyrogen produces prompt monophasic fevers in rabbits, does not induce fever tolerance when given daily, and is inactivated by trypsin. In many respects, the characteristics of the in vitro reaction resemble experimental steroid-induced fever. For example, release of pyrogen varies directly with the concentration of steroid. 4-8 hr of contact between steroid and leukocyte is required for activation of the cell. Rabbit leukocytes are not activated by etiocholanolone. Finally, androsterone, the 5α-isomer of etiocholanolone, does not induce pyrogen release in vitro. These studies suggest that experimental steroid fever in man may be mediated by an endogenous pyrogen released from leukocytes.
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      RonnyT
      Senior Member
      Last edited by RonnyT; 09-21-2010, 08:55 AM.

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      • #4
        part 2

        The Danish student Michael Timm did some research on pyrogens "in vitro" on AA steroids, we will cover it with an article. Especially prone to pyrogen release are Nor-19 steroids such as Boldenone and Nandrolone and then especially the short estrifications.

        Studies on steroid fever II. Pyrogenic and anti-pyrogenic activity in vitro of some endogenous steroids of man
        G. M. Dillard and Phyllis Bodel Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510 Published December, 1970

        The pyrogenic properties of some C-19 and C-21 steroids were examined by in vitro incubation of human blood leukocytes with serum-buffer solutions of the steroids and injection of the 18-hr supernatants into rabbits. In previous studies this method demonstrated release of leukocyte endogenous pyrogen by etiocholanolone. With two exceptions, steroids known to cause fever in man, such as 11β-OH etiocholanolone and 3α-hydroxy-5β-pregnane-20-one were also pyrogenic in vitro. All steroids tested which are nonpyrogenic in man, such as androsterone, 3β-OH etiocholanolone, and 3α, 17α-dihydroxy-5β-pregnan-20-one were also nonpyrogenic in vitro. Solubility in aqueous solution did not correlate with pyrogenic capacity.
        Inhibition of pyrogen release from human leukocytes in vitro by hydrocortisone and estradiol was demonstrated. Hydrocortisone-treated leukocytes released less pyrogen than did normal leukocytes when stimulated either by etiocholanolone or by phagocytosis of heat-killed staphylococci. On the other hand, estradiol-treated blood leukocytes and mononuclear cells showed significant suppression of pyrogen release when phagocytosis, but not etiocholanolone, was used as the stimulus. When blood cells were incubated with progesterone, greater than normal amounts of pyrogen were released following phagocytosis, and the inhibiting effect of estradiol could be partially reversed. Neither estradiol nor hydrocortisone appeared to act on rabbit leukocytes.
        These studies indicate that a variety of naturally-occurring steroids may alter pyrogen release from leukocytes. Alterations in steroid balance in man may influence normal temperature regulation and contribute to clinical fevers.

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