If hes using the GH long term dont you think his insulin resistance will continue,,,, LOL and you think it will only last a day to get back to normal? LOL common brotha ,, Books have good information your right but Experiments, and Studies done on humans, rats, with specific guidelines provide much better real world information...
Combined with real world knowledge from my self, and many other bros I think you need to do more research,,
And 2-5 IU dosed 2 times a day morning- night (more then 6 ours apart, which is a fat loss maintence dose) will create no inuslin resistance in long term ,, no one has said 2-5 iu dosed 5 times if this was what you were thinking and im sure most people understood this...
i don't want to argue about semantics in a pedantic matter, that is not my intention or my goal. if you want to keep calling me names, that's fine, you can if you wish, i don't want to derail this guys thread off topic anymore though so i'm going to address this: "
And 2-5 IU dosed 2 times a day morning- night (more then 6 ours apart, which is a fat loss maintence dose) will create no inuslin resistance in long term ,, no one has said 2-5 iu dosed 5 times if this was what you were thinking and im sure most people understood this..."
there's a huge range between 2iu and 5iu dosed twice daily, at the lowest end of the range, it's 6iu less GH a day, so yes, it will have less on an impact on causing insulin resistance due to being less
overall gh used. at 5iu, dosed 2 times a day, it will indeed increase IGF and insulin resistance, to what extent less than the 10iu shot all at once? Marginally, if any at all, though neither of us can, with certainty, claim exactly how much in a sweeping generalization because there are many many variables.
the issue here with your statement, however, is that you cannot simultaneously claim insulin resistance will be prolonged in the long term with GH usage, while concurrently stating that splitting up the dosage, a mere 6 hours a part (before GH levels from the injections even drop to 0) will not elevate insulin resistance, that insulin sensitivity will return to normal a few hours after an injection. these two notions, are antithetical. either GH injections cause prolonged elevations in insulin resistance, and splitting the injections has no effect on reducing insulin resistance as it will still accrues; or that insulin sensitivity goes back to normal relatively quickly once systemic GH levels drop down to base line. based on studies and personal experience i tend to side with the latter, which brings one to the conclusion that:
the risks of permanently causing insulin resistance to the point of diabetes is greatly exaggerated, as the insulin resistance will subside once GH stops being used.moreover, a very long, intricate peer reviewed study, has proven that diabetes is a reversible health disease with the proper steps, further reinforcing the idea that the likelihood of developing permanent diabetes from using a mere 10iu a day, is greatly greatly exaggerated, regardless how it is injected.