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Sometimes you just have to unwind after a long day.
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you after eating that big juicy cheese whopper from burger king
Sometimes you just have to unwind after a long day.
toxin in bloodstream=>increased need for antioxidants=>testosterone released into the blood=>less testosterone, it gets used upSmoking is based and raises your testosterone. Enjoy king.
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Your "bro-science" logic that doesn't actually reflect how human biology works.toxin in bloodstream=>increased need for antioxidants=>testosterone released into the blood=>less testosterone, it gets used up
this is basic sv3rige biochemistry
are you natty if you lift and smokeYour "bro-science" logic that doesn't actually reflect how human biology works.
That’s not how endocrinology works. If 'toxins' or 'oxidative stress' raised testosterone, then being sick with the flu or having alcohol poisoning would make your T-levels skyrocket. In reality, actual toxins crash your testosterone because the body shifts into survival mode (cortisol).
Nicotine raises T because it’s a chemical stimulant that blocks the aromatase enzyme (which stops T from turning into estrogen) and triggers the brain to signal for more production. It’s a specific pharmacological effect, not a 'panic response' to being poisoned.
It’s about Aromatase and LH, not "toxin detection."
Smoke, chew, the gum, the patch, or vape; nicotine will raise your T. It's a Nootropic and a stimulant, I'm not saying everything in a cigarette is good for you that's absurd but what I said stands.
That truly is the question now isn't it? Everyone should be adding a patch to their stack.are you natty if you lift and smoke
Does it circumvent tolerance build up and actually increase the baseline level of testosterone? Do you get a free candy and not the one you have to take every day just to return to the "old normality"?Nicotine raises T because it’s a chemical stimulant that blocks the aromatase enzyme (which stops T from turning into estrogen) and triggers the brain to signal for more production. It’s a specific pharmacological effect, not a 'panic response' to being poisoned.
You’re right about the old normality for things like dopamine, but hormones like testosterone don't always follow that same downward spiral.Does it circumvent tolerance build up and actually increase the baseline level of testosterone? Do you get a free candy and not the one you have to take every day just to return to the "old normality"?
That's how it usually goes with drugs, you end up hooked up to them with no real benefit and with lower baseline level of whatever biomolecular response it triggers.
Regardless if nicotine is good or bad, did you guys know that caffeine is produced by plants to kill off bugs and small animals? And humans be like give me more of this poison. Sipping tea is just too comfy to give up though and I decided to hell with it.
Well, that is the part that sounds familiar from reading about other drugs: as soon as something blocks something, the organism responds by producing more of the original thing and it shifts baselines.The gain: Nicotine inhibits the aromatase enzyme (which stops T from converting into Estrogen). As long as you have nicotine in your system, that 'block' is active.
Asked DeepSeek v3.2 for an opinion and it says smokers have 20% lower testosteroneThese things are cool to LLM out, if the person is interested and in the mood for new knowledge.
DeepSeek (and most AI models) are programmed with "safety guardrails." If you ask an AI "Is smoking good for you?" or "Does smoking raise T?", the AI is trained to prioritize the "Smoking is bad" narrative to avoid being seen as promoting a health hazard.Asked DeepSeek v3.2 for an opinion and it says smokers have 20% lower testosterone
Nicotine has notable, dose- and duration-dependent effects on sex steroid hormones at the biochemical level, primarily through indirect modulation of steroidogenesis pathways rather than direct receptor agonism/antagonism. Key interactions:
- Testosterone:
- Acute stimulation: Nicotine activates nAChRs on hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis neurons, increasing GnRH, LH, and FSH release, which boosts Leydig cell steroidogenesis (e.g., via StAR protein upregulation and cholesterol transport). This elevates serum testosterone short-term (e.g., +15-30% post-cigarette).
- Chronic inhibition/suppression: Long-term exposure desensitizes nAChRs, induces oxidative stress, and inhibits key enzymes in testosterone biosynthesis:
- Mild inhibition of 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17β-HSD) (type 3 isoform), reducing androstenedione → testosterone conversion (IC50 ~1-10 mM in vitro).
- Suppression of 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3β-HSD) activity via ROS-mediated damage.
- Overall, smokers show 10-20% lower total/free testosterone vs. non-smokers, linked to Leydig cell apoptosis and aromatase dysregulation.
- Estrogen:
- Aromatase (CYP19A1) inhibition: Nicotine directly inhibits aromatase enzyme (converts testosterone/androstenedione to estradiol/E2), with IC50 ~50-200 μM in cell models. Tobacco smoke compounds (e.g., nitrosamines) enhance this, reducing estrogen synthesis by 20-50%.
- Accelerated estrogen metabolism: Induces CYP1A1/1A2 via AhR activation, increasing 2-hydroxylation and glucuronidation of estradiol, lowering bioavailable estrogen levels.
- Result: Hypoestrogenic state in women (earlier menopause by 1-2 years; osteoporosis risk ↑), anti-estrogenic in men (potential gynecomastia protection but prostate issues).
Sex-specific notes: Men: ↓testosterone → erectile dysfunction, infertility (sperm motility ↓40%). Women: ↓estrogen → bone loss, hot flashes. Vaping/pure nicotine shows similar but milder effects.
Health note: These disruptions contribute to reproductive toxicity, infertility, and hormone-related cancers (e.g., prostate via DHT imbalance). Cessation reverses much of this within months—testosterone rebounds 15-25%. Discuss with endocrinologist; avoid self-medicating with TRT on nicotine. Sources: Toxicol Sci (2012), J Clin Endocrinol Metab (2007), Reprod Toxicol (2019).
@Schwarzwald