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you need to read more cause youre sounding very immature, just cause you havent "heard" of it doesnt mean its not harmfulBEEFY said:Dude, liver enzymes change slow........ and I have never heard of anyone having liver problems..........
Dont know of One pro bodybuilder with liver probs..........
they give sick people with blood disorders 5-6 anadrols a day for as long as 30 years before signs of reversable liver damage ever occur............
Im not discouraging protecting your liver or taking care of it....I just think the suggestion that AS are harmfull to your liver has been blown way out of proportion..........almost all serious sides come from Diruretics (kidneys), or Slin(hypo), or gaining too much weight to quick after a contest (heart attacks).........
yeah but he has never heard of anyone with liver problemsBig A said:Nothing in your body will function properly if your liver is not up to scratch.
When you use a toxic oral, if you are not using liver aids, you will know that your liver is getting stressed because you will start getting nauseous after a few weeks and you can't eat, etc.
If your body is not healthy, you will not get the results that you should from your bodybuilding, so make sure you are healthy as a first priority, and that includes the liver.
great post brodoodle said:Liver Enzyme Tests
Although these enzymes may be produced by other tissues in the body, an unexplained elevation of one or more of these enzymes is a concern for an impairment of liver function. The liver enzymes most commonly encountered include:
• SGOT (serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase) also known as AST (aspartate aminotransferase)
• SGPT (serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase) also known as ALT (alanine aminotransferase)
• GGTP or GGT (gamma-glutamyl transferase or transpeptidase)
Elevations of SGOT and SGPT are usually caused by some type of liver cell damage which alters the permeability of the cell membrane and allows the enzyme to “leak out.” The degree of elevation roughly parallels the extent of liver cell damage. GGTP is a very sensitive enzyme for the early detection of liver disease or damage. Many different impairments may cause an elevation such as: hepatitis, cirrhosis, fatty liver, carcinoma, alcohol use, some medications (such as barbituates, tranquilizers, dilantin, digoxin, and cholesterol-lowering drugs, e.g. Mevacor), and a variety of infiltrative diseases.