Could Testosterone Increase Supplements Deepen Your Voice?

I think it is due to the supplements - they are effecting your reading comprehension - see eg…

You can’t just post links to a study that doesn’t say what you say it does and expect people to take you seriously.

I think you might want to go off the supplements for a while.

But seriously - worse case scenario - assuming there is no other bad stuff happening - if you notice your voice staring to change - stop taking it! It isn’t like this happens over night. Sort of like women worried about working out making them look too muscular - well if it does - stop!

You may need the truth but I dare say, good sir, you can’t handle the truth.

Thanks guys but I feel a deepening voice can be subtle and hard to detect until the change is great. I mean could this really have this effect…just a testo increase and estrogen receptor blockage?

Testostrone isn’t anti-estrogen. They are different compounds. Women have some testostrone and men have some estrogen. They don’t cancel each other.

The article you linked to says nothing about testostrone. The article is about breast cancer therapy. It’s explaining that the tocotrienol compound inhibited the growth of both types of breast cancer cells, ones with estrogen and ones without. NO testostrone at all.

picci, just check out the OP’s previous threads. You’ll discover that logic and reason are not effective tools there either.

Yeah, this is following the same routine as his previous thread.

-The OP latches onto a pseudo-medical concept that has no scientific support.

  • People post the data that shows his concept is wrong.
  • He claims to have evidence that supports his position but fails to post any or posts things that don’t say what he claims they say.
  • He then restates his original question in a slightly reworded format.
  • Go to Step 1.

:smiley:
Instant classic! My hat is off to you, sir!

Thanks, but it’s not original. Even if apropos to the situation.

And I must also admit a lot of my patients don’t pass the Turing Test either. :wink:

Heres some proof. What about this.

Better. Unfortunately what that seems to be is part of a scam. A pretty impressive one though I must say.

That link purports to be a citation from The European Journal of Endocrinology, from June 2012. A real journal. Which actually published this in June 2012. Something completely different. The real European Journal of Endocrinology’s address is http://www.eje-online.org/ … this fake one is http://ej-endocrinology.org/ The difference? Articles published in the real one can be found in a literature search engine like google scholar and PubMed. Moderately significant effort on my part cannot make those alleged abstracts in the fake one come up in either engine. They do not exist. Oh, there are other clues, like in a real journal you can see the current months table of contents as opposed to every page featuring a cover from June 2012.

This company has completely faked that page as a faux journal that is a sound-alike for a real one exclusively to scam people with.

Impressive. Scary, but impressive.

ineedthetruth, where did you get the link to that page?

I think enough factual information has been presented here to answer the OP’s questions adequately. I’m going to close this.

ineedthetruth is instructed not to open another thread on this or a similar subject.

Colibri
General Questions Moderator