Ellis,
I am getting more and more serious about getting started with
HGH/Testosterone/Insulin etc. . .
Ellis: {Good! There is nothing as good for your health as the
right dose of the right hormone at the right time. Understand
what each of these hormones will do. Read:
http://www.rajeun.net/big5.html
- Ellis}
In preparing for these treatments and creating a baseline, I got an
ultrasound of my testicles and the doctors found little calcification
in both testicles.
Ellis: {do you mean: he found "a little calcification" or do you mean
"he found little or no calcification" ? - Ellis}
Chris: I have one concern left. Will this therapy cause the calcification to
grow and turn cancerous?
Ellis: {Will WHICH therapy cause the calcification to grow and turn
cancerous? HGH replacement or testosterone or insulin will not cause
anything to grow in your testicles. Growth hormone therapy does not
cause things to grow, it causes things to heal. Before age 21, it
causes bones to grow longer...
Insulin will control blood glucose. And testosterone might cause high
levels of estrogen, which you will not have if you take Arimidex
together with testosterone, and monitor "estradiol" in blood tests to
keep it in a range of 10 to 30... I think all three of these will be
good for you.
In spite of all the dangers that some genius doctors might say about
the danger of growth hormone causing an undetected cancerous tumor to
grow, or it might cause internal organs to grow and not fit inside our
chest, and other possible growth, I have NEVER heard of anybody having
an undetected cancerous tumor grow out of control because the person
had growth hormone replacement therapy... And I have NEVER heard that calcium
ever accumulated BECAUSE somebody took growth hormone.
It might happen that somebody that takes growth hormone might get
cancer someday, and it might happen that somebody that takes growth
hormone might accumulate calcium in the heart, or somewhere else in
the circulatory system... but it is not CAUSED by growth hormone.
Very curious how common is cancer (about 1 out of 3 persons will
get some type of cancer, sometime in their life) and how few persons
have reported discovering that they have cancer here on this forum.
Only ONE person reported prostate cancer, one month after starting
with HGH (prostate cancer takes years to develop to the point where
it is out of control...) and one person blamed his cancer on having
taken HGH six years before his cancer was discovered. (I did not
agree that his cancer was caused by HGH)
That is it. No more cases of cancer have been reported by persons
writing to me on this forum, in 10 years and 10,000 posts.
Un-be-lievable. Is HGH a VACCINE against cancer?
And I have NEVER EVER heard of anybody whose internal organs grew and
did not fit in their chest. I have read that the THYMUS gland
reverses its atrophy, so in a sense that means it "grows" (like a
rose bud grows...) but this is a good thing. I hope your thymus
grows.
As for calcium in testicles, I would try EDTA chelation first, to
reduce or remove the calcium. - Ellis}
Are there any other concerns I should have and other testing I
should be doing?
Thanks for your help.
Chris
Ellis: {No, I can't think of anything else. Try EDTA chelation,
and monitor your blood glucose several times per day every day,
and eat in such a way that you help your blood glucose to stay
between 70 and 100 mg/dl, preferably between 70 and 85 mg/dl...
And since you are going to take insulin, read both of my pages:
http://www.rajeun.net/usinginsulin.html
and
http://www.rajeun.net/usinglantus.html
Lantus is fantastic. I would even recommend that you start to
learn first with Lantus, later add Humulin "R"... and after a
bottle of practice, switch to Humalog. (Humulin "R" is slower than
Humalog, and it lasts longer in your bloodstream... so it is
better to learn with, but Humalog is better, once you know how
to use Humulin "R")
Start with Lantus, because it is easier to learn to use it, and
it is less likely that you will do a mistake while learning. The
only mistake you can do is that you forget to eat, which results
in hypoglycemia. Lantus is so slow that even if you forgot to eat,
and even if you got hypoglycemia, I cannot imagine that it would
ever be severe hypoglycemia (below 35 mg/dl).
I think you are going in the right direction, so keep on doing
what you want to do. Thanks for writing. - Ellis}