Dbol and Benzo detox, could it work?

Mighty-oak

Bluelighter
Joined
Mar 1, 2016
Messages
290
I thought I would put this is this section as it is regarding an AAS and not many people on the other groups know about such drugs. I have used Dbol in the past, mostly in the early 90's when I was at my peak. I am currently coming off a benzo called Clonazepam which is proving incredibly hard as it has made my anxiety go sky high, feel fatigue, low moods and irritable. My thoughts are this..... Dbol suppresses cortisol which is very high at present due to benzo withdrawing, plus Dbol lifts moods and gives energy.....Could this help while withdrawing or could it make withdrawal worse due to increase in BP and heart rate?

Any thoughts/ideas/suggestions would be great.

Thanks in advance.
 
Haven't you asked the same question before? How you react to Dbol while withdrawing is going to be very much a personal thing - it could make anxiety and moodiness worse, particularly as it causes a lot of oestrogen-related sides for guys. However you're never going to know until you try it, as there aren't any studies and little anecdotal experience on this combination.

A safer bet might be proviron, which has some useful mood-enhancing properties as discussed a few months ago.

For cortisol, phosphatidylserine (a regular health supplement) is an effective suppressor at 600mg/day, I think I mentioned this to you before.
 
Thanks CFC......My memory is terrible, evidently a side effect of benzos? I belong to a car forum and have asked the same question about a sump gasket three times over the past month as pointed out by another member the other day.....Memory is meant to improve once off benzos so I read....Hope it does as called my dog the wrong name this morning :( I tried Proviron, that seemed to make me really anxious but gave me a lot of energy. Going to look up phosphatidylserine now. Had an ECG last week, they are concerned about something called 'Long QT' so got to see the Dr this Friday about that, never even heard of long QT!
 
Had an ECG last week, they are concerned about something called 'Long QT' so got to see the Dr this Friday about that, never even heard of long QT!

Sorry to hear about this mate. I would recommend you don't start using any kind of AAS at all until you get more feedback on this potential condition.

LQTS can be triggered by anything that stimulates, and AAS can lower the trigger threshold by enhancing sympathetic nervous system activity.

For the same reason, you should avoid all stimulants for now, including caffeine if possible.

Also make sure you're taking a high-dose supplement of magnesium, and that you're getting enough potassium.
 
Sorry to hear about this mate. I would recommend you don't start using any kind of AAS at all until you get more feedback on this potential condition.

LQTS can be triggered by anything that stimulates, and AAS can lower the trigger threshold by enhancing sympathetic nervous system activity.

For the same reason, you should avoid all stimulants for now, including caffeine if possible.

Also make sure you're taking a high-dose supplement of magnesium, and that you're getting enough potassium.


Thanks mate. Interestingly I dont touch caffeine or any kind of stimulant, Nurse seems to think it could be Citalopram (Celexa) which is an SSRI drug for my anxiety that could have something to do with it? One very bad thing, I do smoke cigarettes which I really must try and quit as cholesterol has come back high, think smoking increases bad cholesterol?

Edit.....I live off chicken, rice, oats and semi-skimmed milk so magnesium and potassium intake I reckon would be on the low side.....So thanks for that, I will get some magnesium supps in and eat bananas as read they are high in potassium.
 
I live off chicken, rice, oats and semi-skimmed milk so magnesium and potassium intake I reckon would be on the low side.....So thanks for that, I will get some magnesium supps in and eat bananas as read they are high in potassium.

No fruit and veg? It would really help you to eat plenty, you're missing out on all the nutrients your body needs, especially in withdrawal.
 
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