- Joined
- Dec 22, 2007
- Messages
- 8,183
Yes.Did a study show that steroids that have a higher androgenic rating have the effect more?
Yes.Did a study show that steroids that have a higher androgenic rating have the effect more?
Ok, I thought I remembered seeing that somewhere.Yes.
You don`t have to, however is good to know the protentional side effects, I don`t care how much you or others are using.i dont care what EMERIC says..... he will get like every time
lolol....nothing sadly......(for now)You don`t have to, however is good to know the protentional side effects, I don`t care how much you or others are using.
Love you to.lolol....nothing sadly......(for now)
you took my post wrong, but thats ok.
i love you
All the advice I've used from Emeric has helped me.Yeah, I think Tenny was saying that you get it right every time.
They use neuroblastoma cells (upreg Ca2+ signalling) to make the conclusion that high testosterone levels cause neural cell death
You'd have to dig into this, but pretty sure neuroblastoma cells have a different makeup to that of a regular cell (usually any form of cancer cell has some p53 and oncogene malfunction) making them more resistant to apop/cell death
Lots of background info needed to understand this better; it can be either that it doesn't have that much correlation to actual neurons, or even more adverse effects on regular neurons making us far more retarded
thethinker48 is correct. Neuroblastomas consist of cancer cells that have malignantly transformed from normal fetal neuroblast cells which usually mature into different nerve cells and the adrenal medulla. Neuroblastomas are categorized as a neuroblastic tumor which also includes other tumors of the sympathetic ganglia and adrenal medulla that are derived from primordial neural crest cells (i.e., neuroblast cells) populating these sites. Without getting into the minutiae, most neuroblastomas occur as a sporadic mutation of the proto-oncogene N-MYC on chromosome 2 (I'm pretty sure that's the chromosome number). ~2-3% of neuroblastomas are familial and are associated with germline mutations in the ALK (anaplastic lymphoma kinase) gene. Sorry but I don't remember the chromosome number for that particular gene.
You broke it down in a far better way than I ever could lol
Brings back cell bio memories from college
The mark of intelligence is being able to communicate complex ideas simply.Simple people think simple. Just typed the barest of the bare facts about neuroblastomas which is a very interesting subject as far as cancers/tumors go.