@Driada Medical So i tested your HCG with a test and 2 times it came out negative. I haven't felt any effects from it. Normally HCG reduces my bloat, improves libido and i feel the mood boost from the neurosteroids which calm me down. Nothing from your product except for the red blisters at the injection site. Pictures below.
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Hi!!
Unfortunately is not a simple topic.
High concentrations of HCG can create a false negative on those tests, especially on a cheap ones. Average pregnancy test has a detection range is 20 to 50 mIU/mL, depending on test Low-sensitivity: Qualitative test: 1500-2000 mIU/mL - m before IU means 1/1000 and in this case concentration is too high above the range.
In general, the pregnancy test is not a good way to test your HCG. The only way to know for sure is to send it away for testing in lab and we done it in trustful and independent lab.
That will give you a better indication that it’s working, whereas if you take a pregnancy test and piss it out, maybe it only shows that you had SOME HCG in your system (or a tumor that produces HCG), but maybe it was severely underdosed or overdosed.
Additionally, human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) is a dimer. it consists of beta and alpha compounds (subunits). The alpha subunit in the glycoprotein is similar to the alpha hormone TSH, LH and FSH. The beta subunit is unique, which allows testing based on it. In this case, free b-subunits, b-hCG molecules are taken as the basis for the test. Their total concentration is analyzed.
Our HCG is similar to Ovitrelle its artificial recombinant HCG alpha subunit. While most pregnancy test detects beta subunit only. But Alpha subunit is responsible for the HCG effects like hormone production.
So pregnancy test is not not a very reliable way to determine the quality of a product.
it is tipically suggested if you want to make a LH\FSH blood test, its not a good idea also. The human chorionic hormone is not an LH, this molecule contains the alpha subunit in the glycoprotein, that is similar to the alpha hormone TSH, LH and FSH. So it mimics LH functions in the male body (increasing testosterone levels mainly) and to a lesser extent FSH functions (spermatogenesis), which is partly analogous to these hormones, but in no case will it increase LH and FSH in the blood.
There is a peptide called gonadoreline and it can increase LH\FSH in the blood serum, but HCG works differently.
Gonadotropin replaces LH and FSH during your anabolic steroid cycle to prevent your testicles from disfunctioning. If you start using HCG, for example, when your LH and FSH are in normal values, then to some extent HCG will inhibit them.
So you should not expect that during usage of chorionic gonadotropin, your levels of LH\FSH hormones will increase. You should expect only an increase of testicles activity and increase the level of total testosterone (in case that your Leydig and Sertoli cells are ready to respond to HCG).
Often athletes who have been on a cycle for a long time and have not used HCG will have an extremely weak response in the beginning as their testicles gets atrophied.
In case, you want to track the appliance of HCG, then it makes no sense for you to look at the levels of LH and FSH, but only at the level of total testosterone. In order to increase your LH and FSH, you could simply use SERMs like clomiphene or tamoxifen after your cycle.
So, I would say that is not just a give and take pregnancy test to answer your concern, but indeed a lab blind test, that (by the way) is also rewarded by the lab