Description
Active substance: Testosterone (base) Purity/standard: 99% Packaging: sealed bag 10 gr Shipped from: Europe
This
product is intended for laboratory research use only. It is not for use
as food additives, drugs, cosmetic, household chemicals or other
inappropriate applications. The customer acknowledges that the product
will be handled only by qualified and trained professionals.
Testosterone is a steroid hormone from the androgen group.
Testosterone is primarily secreted in the testes of males and the
ovaries of females although small amounts are secreted by the adrenal
glands. It is the principal male sex hormone and an anabolic steroid.
In both males and females, it plays key roles in health and well-being.
Examples include enhanced libido, energy, immune function, and
protection against osteoporosis. On average, the adult male body
produces about twenty times the amount of testosterone an adult
female's body does.
Testosterone may be administered to an athlete in order to increase
performance, and is considered to be a form of doping in most sports.
In males, a testosterone patch is applied to the scrotum for several
hours before activity. Anabolic steroids (of which testosterone is one)
have also been taken to enhance muscle development, strength, or
endurance.
The original and primary use of testosterone is for the treatment of
males who have too little or no natural endogenous testosterone
production; males with hypogonadism. Appropriate use for this purpose
is legitimate hormone replacement therapy, which maintains serum
testosterone levels in the normal range.
However, over the years, as with every hormone, testosterone or
other anabolic steroids has also been given for many other conditions
and purposes besides replacement, with variable success but higher
rates of side effects or problems. Examples include infertility, lack
of libido or erectile dysfunction, osteoporosis, penile enlargement,
height growth, bone marrow stimulation and reversal of anemia, and even
appetite stimulation. By the late 1940s testosterone was being touted
as an anti-aging wonder drug (e.g., see Paul de Kruif's The Male
Hormone) in exactly the same way that growth hormone is being described
today.
Replacement therapy can take the form of injectable depots,
transdermal patches and gels, subcutaneous pellets and oral therapy.
Adverse effects of testosterone supplementation include minor side
effects such as acne and oily skin, and more significant complications
such as increased hematocrit, exacerbation of sleep apnea and
acceleration of pre-existing prostate cancer growth. Testosterone also
causes suppression of spermatogenesis and can lead to infertility. It
is recommended that physicians screen for prostate cancer with a
digital rectal exam and PSA (prostate specific antigen) level prior to
initiating therapy, and monitor hematocrit and PSA levels closely
during therapy.
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