Prizz said:I Listen, if you have cancer, you get sick..... Ok, sure there are stories you hear where a person didn't know they had a tumor, but that's pretty rare.... Usually, cancer tumors will show themselves to you in some way.... You will feel a lump, you will get sick, you get weak, you will get pain.... Something will happen to make you go to the doctor..... Like I said, this isn't the story EVERYTIME, but 90% of the cases it presents itself.....
I have no exp using IGF yet, so I understand your concerns, but I don't think it should stop you from using it..... Look at it this way, if you do have some cancer tumor hiding, and the IGF will make it grow, you will find it that much faster, and get it taken care of..... If you have cancer, you have cancer, and it's gonna suck..... I think the IGF/Cancer phobia will diminish in time....
rizz
The problem with this kind of thinking is that not all cancers produce tumors. Skin cancer, for example, doesn't produce huge, quick growing lumps which are readily noticeable but rather basel cells which are cancerous. Leukemia is essentially cancer of the blood and acute forms can kill you within weeks. The only statement you made I agree with is that there is no single test for all the cancers one might get.
To recommend IGF by saying
"the IGF will make it grow, you will find it that much faster, and get it taken care of"
is just plain irresponsible and you're playing with people's lives when you say it. Are you sure you really want to do that? The bottom line is that science really isn't certain as to the exact extent by which IGF effects cancer.