And yet another from Brian Hildebrand...........
anadrol is not the devil so many people "claim" it is. women can use it, but its like racing a car. there is a learning curve. you don't take someone who is used to driving a mini van and put them in a top fuel dragster for better grocery getting times.
anadrol like nearly EVERY hormone out there has the ability to temporarily cause increased stress to the liver, and nearly every time, cessation of the drug can return those to normative values. however... the way I train also causes liver stress and will elevate my liver and cardiac markers.
so take into account, you are using an exogenic compound to increase the bodies normative ability, and yes, it will cause stress. recreational drugs do it, vitamins can even do it to some degree in varying ways.
is anadrol safe for women? as a GENERAL rule, I believe it is. however, using it in a controlled and calculated manner, like any other drug, should be of utmost priority. moving outside those parameters are what sets women up for the unwanted side effects.
and find me one study that says anadrol causes cancer? there are several old studies but they were with patients who had underlying disease processes (HIV/AIDS, Immune suppression, etc) and can hardly validate the potential.
anadrol is not the devil so many people "claim" it is. women can use it, but its like racing a car. there is a learning curve. you don't take someone who is used to driving a mini van and put them in a top fuel dragster for better grocery getting times.
anadrol like nearly EVERY hormone out there has the ability to temporarily cause increased stress to the liver, and nearly every time, cessation of the drug can return those to normative values. however... the way I train also causes liver stress and will elevate my liver and cardiac markers.
so take into account, you are using an exogenic compound to increase the bodies normative ability, and yes, it will cause stress. recreational drugs do it, vitamins can even do it to some degree in varying ways.
is anadrol safe for women? as a GENERAL rule, I believe it is. however, using it in a controlled and calculated manner, like any other drug, should be of utmost priority. moving outside those parameters are what sets women up for the unwanted side effects.
and find me one study that says anadrol causes cancer? there are several old studies but they were with patients who had underlying disease processes (HIV/AIDS, Immune suppression, etc) and can hardly validate the potential.