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Test/Anavar/Slin. long time listener, first time caller.


thatwaslight

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 4/1/2016 at 0:39 PM, Daz69 said:

 

In hypoglycemia, blood glucose is dangerously low, if blood glucose is low there will be no insulin release.. Insulin is responsible for many things, such as protein synthesis by increasing amino acid transport into cells and ribosomal protein translocation via mRNA...

 

Low blood sugar = No insulin = No proteins synthesis..

 

Can't have everything...

low blood sugars,no insulin.no protein synthesis,

in the situation i was talking about,inducing hypoglycemia,you will have low blood sugars and also excess insulin.

to re phrase my question,do you think by manipulating blood sugars and insulin to conditions favorable to gh release,it woud bring benifits similar to that of injecting gh.

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2 hours ago, woody said:

low blood sugars,no insulin.no protein synthesis,

in the situation i was talking about,inducing hypoglycemia,you will have low blood sugars and also excess insulin.

to re phrase my question,do you think by manipulating blood sugars and insulin to conditions favorable to gh release,it would bring benefits similar to that of injecting gh.

 

When in a hypoglycaemic state insulin should be low, glucagon should be high..?? Glucagon is released in response to low blood glucose levels, targeting liver glycogen conversion into glucose..

Insulin is released in response to high BGL... not low BGL..

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On 4/1/2016 at 0:39 PM, Daz69 said:

 

In hypoglycemia, blood glucose is dangerously low, if blood glucose is low there will be no insulin release.. Insulin is responsible for many things, such as protein synthesis by increasing amino acid transport into cells and ribosomal protein translocation via mRNA...

 

Low blood sugar = No insulin = No proteins synthesis..

 

Can't have everything...

low blood sugars,no insulin.no protein synthesis,

in the situation i was talking about,inducing hypoglycemia,you will have low blood sugars and also excess insulin.

 

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2 hours ago, woody said:

low blood sugars,no insulin.no protein synthesis,

in the situation i was talking about,inducing hypoglycemia,you will have low blood sugars and also excess insulin.

 

 

How is it physiologically possible to have low blood glucose and excess insulin..? Unless you inject it, which would be dangerous..?

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On 4/16/2016 at 11:44 AM, Daz69 said:

 

How is it physiologically possible to have low blood glucose and excess insulin..? Unless you inject it, which would be dangerous..?

,yes im talking about injecting insulin intravenously to induce hypo glycemia!!!!which is what many are doing,despite the dangers,in hope for a usable gh release,my question was is this viable?a b/b hit the papers not long ago from doing this,was luckily found unconcious but still alive,i realize the dangers of the practice,its the viability im asking about.the very same procedure is done on children with growth problems to measure ther gh release.

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