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Started by love88, June 29, 2009, 08:48:09 PM
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Quote from: Shelina on July 10, 2009, 12:24:17 PMTo what I have heard, Cyproterone Acetate is officially the most potent and strongest but the most dangerous as well.In your case particularly, you'd rather urgently need more of a DHT blocker (that thing which converts testosterone and make you bald) than testosterone blocker. DUTASTERIDE (Brand Avodart) works the best for those losing hair. Gliding in the archives I have seen some people claiming to regain their hair growth quickly with Avodart/Dutas but the side effect it makes men not hard sexually anymore but it does not apply to you as you're a woman.
Quote from: Autumn on July 16, 2009, 03:33:43 AMDutas doesn't break your willie.Sexual arousal is a function primarily of the mind. If you are absolutely disgusted by having an erection, then the knowledge that there can be sexual side effects from medication is probably going to all mesh together nicely. For me, after I got on dutas, I actually for the first time in over a year had sexual fantasies about women and was much hornier. Straight men do take it for hair loss, and it's an anti-cancer med so it's not exactly trans only. You can experience varying levels of breast development from it, but for me a year on avodart did nothing compared to a month on spiro.
Quote from: Becca on July 16, 2009, 12:46:00 PMI experienced this with dutasteride as well, and it turns out it can apparently raise general testosterone levels a little bit while blocking more dht. The change isn't extreme in most of it's consumers, but for us it's huge. Funky. Anyway it was nothing a lil extra spiro couldn't handle. It does make me wonder though, if finasteride might be a better option. I know it supresses about 25% less dht, but we are talking about such tiny percentages that the difference is negligible. I guess the question is if the testosterone boost from dutas is permanent or just a short term side effect.
Quote from: Naturally Blonde on July 16, 2009, 06:14:20 AMI was put on Goserelin acetate (Zoladex) by a gender clinic at the NHS and hated it. It's also a form of Dutasteride. It was a bad experience for me and I got endless erections when I didn't want them. It was a real reversal of everything and for me it was truly horrendous. These days I now choose my own medication.
Quote from: A~ on July 18, 2009, 04:49:01 AMZoladex is not a form of dutasteride. Zoladex is a gonadotropin releasing hormone super-agonist whereas dutasteride is a 5-alpha-reductase inhibitor. Their mechanism of action is totally different. One inhibits the release of lutenizing hormone thereby stopping the gonads pumping out hormones, the other prevents testosterone being converted to DHT.Zoladex does tend to cause a testosterone spike when the first injection is given and for some people a smaller spike whenever subsequent injections are given (and sometimes the 12 week depot seems to only work well enough for about 11 weeks). I've been on a GnRH agonist and the initial T spike can be horrid, but it then suppressed my testosterone very well (I took it for a couple of months before surgery when I had to be off spiro and estrogen).
Quote from: Jet Alexis Armstrong on March 07, 2016, 01:25:29 PMI began taking Spiro some months before I started Estrogen and I did notice some small changes ( only small but noticeable swelling of breast tissue etc ) so it clearly has an Estrogenic effect too .
QuoteJust as a side note my feet have shrunk by over two sizes and when I brought this up I was informed that this is an effect of Spiro fairly rare but not unknown.