Old injury

nolys

Bluelight Crew
Joined
Jun 15, 2009
Messages
3,547
What's up, long time no speak...
Anybody who remembers me might remember that I had a lot of issues with my right rotor cuff, which brings me to my query...
I gave up on lifting for a a year or so there, again because I wanted to see if time would heal my rotor cuff injury. The pain subsided around month 5-6 so I decided to give it another 6 months to make sure.
I was planning my comeback, but ended up getting into a serious fight, and my shoulder is worse than its ever been since. This was 2 Saturdays ago.

I want to know if any of these new sarms or peptides are all their cracked up to be? Either bpc-157 or anything else that's any use? I'll consider gh as a last resort because I'm sick of this shit.
Reason I ask is because you can't believe anything you read online about new compounds.

Cheers
 
Bpc and TB seem to be the leading things for injury. Get it checked by a professional to ensure you don't have some serious structural damage beforehand.
 
Hi nolys.... hope you are well, apart from the shoulder...

Get yourself off to a specialist, you've carried that injury for far too long.. TB500 might not be your best option post injury, or post surgery according to my orthopedic surgeon..
 
I got it checked by a doctor who sent me for an ultrasound, said the shoulder is dropped 2-3 cm on one side but because at present the rotor cuff isn't actually torn, they can't do anything about it.
I have been completely let down by the health care system in the UK.
The only advice they have given me is to reduce weight volume by 15%. Which doesn't fix my problem
 
So considering my position gf, what course of action do you think is best? I'm behind the times with all these new peptides and sarms
 
I don't know if an MRI can see better than the ultrasound but I had some shoulder pain, went to a specialist to get a cortisone shot into my shoulder but he wanted me to do an MRI instead. The MRI results showed I had a type 4 rotator cuff tear and a biceps tear. If you have a tear, and it really sounds like you do, peptides won't do it for you. You will either need to live with it, which is fine, or you should consider surgery. I got the surgery, took me out of the gym for several months but I fully recovered my bench strength in one year from surgery. I never got my full range of motion back and it still hurts. It's going to hurt whether you do the surgery or not so if you want to bench big, you should consider seeing a specialist and ask for an MRI. Say you suspect a rotator OR biceps tear. I did not know I had either until after the MRI. Good luck with whatever decision you decide to do.
 
Definitely get a 2nd opinion.

I let my back injury linger for so long trying to "correct" it with deca and peptides, that after a few years now I'm totally incapable of doing deads, squats or rack pulls.

I regret trying to play doctor.
 
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Thanks for the replies. I'm actually changing doctors soon, so I might get a second opinion. I'm going to start a cycle soon of 250mg test and 450mg deca and see if the pain subsides. Its been fine the past week or 2, actually since I wrote this post. I'm not sure about the legitimacy of deca healing injuries. But I'm going to try it. I think I recall reading something that suggested it thickens connective tissue but also makes it more brittle
 
Thanks for the replies. I'm actually changing doctors soon, so I might get a second opinion. I'm going to start a cycle soon of 250mg test and 450mg deca and see if the pain subsides. Its been fine the past week or 2, actually since I wrote this post. I'm not sure about the legitimacy of deca healing injuries. But I'm going to try it. I think I recall reading something that suggested it thickens connective tissue but also makes it more brittle

Hi nolys, I think deca is responsible for increased synovial fluid in joints as opposed to healing properties... Don't most AAS act negatively upon connective tissue, (think I wrote a piece about it some time ago)..?
 
Dude, you got health care. Get it checked and fixed. No aas, peptide or whatever is gonna fix it. It can mask some issues potentially but that's it. Go to the doctor.
 
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