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Mr.X
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krishna said:What's so funny about it? Nolva competes with estrogen at receptor sites. It will take time for estrogen to be out of your system with letro. It will stop new estrogen from forming, but won't do anything to stop estrogen that is already present. If you have gyno symptoms, you need to block the estrogen already present in your system at the receptor site. Nolva will attach to each receptor site as it becomes available, not allowing the estrogen in your system to reattach and cause more damage. If that's funny, then why don't we both start rounding up studies to prove our points!
You said it yourself above:
krishna said:Letro is an aromatase inhibitor. It's method for stopping gyno is strickly prevention. If you have existing gyno, you NEED nolva. Over long periods of time, letro could possibly allow the gyno subside by stopping anymore estrogen from attaching to receptors. If you have gyno, that means it's too late, the estrogen is already there and you need to block it (NOLVA). Letro will not block receptors; all it does is prevent new estrogen from forming........END OF STORY!
Nolva will help with existing gyno; if you have the gyno you need nolva, that's about it. Not sure what you're trying to get at here, I'm pushing the point that the guy needs to use nolva longer and more consistent to see results (same as you're pushing), 8 weeks won't cut it for most gyno, I suggest at least 16 weeks.
Mr.X