Testosterone phenylpropionate is a medicinal chemical substance that has similar effects to testosterone, but its protein assimilation is 12 times stronger than testosterone propionate, and its androgenic effect is 1.5 times that of testosterone propionate. Clinically, it is mainly used for insufficient protein absorption or hyperdecomposition, such as chronic wasting diseases. Such as: malnutrition, severe burns, before and after surgery, fractures that are not easy to heal, old age osteoporosis, childhood growth and development, and advanced malignant tumors.
Testosterone phenylpropionate has the following uses:
1. Used for a variety of male sex hormone deficiency conditions, cryptorchidism, hypogonadism, impotence and male menopause. 1 to 5 years after menopause, breast cancer patients who are not suitable for surgery but have an effect on male hormones are used as conservative treatment.
2. Aplastic anemia and osteoporosis in elderly men.
3. For women with menopausal syndrome, menorrhagia and functional uterine bleeding.
4. To correct debilitating diseases caused by burns, extensive surgery and protein loss caused by long-term inactivity, and prolong the stable period of such patients.
Precautions for the use of testosterone phenylpropionate:
Testosterone phenylpropionate is a prescription drug and must be prescribed by a doctor based on your condition. Self-administration may increase your risk of unreasonable use of drugs: waste of drug resources, delay the disease, develop drug resistance, and serious adverse drug reactions.
Testosterone phenylpropionate needs to be used in full and full course of treatment following the doctor’s prescription. Your symptoms may be alleviated before the condition is fully controlled, but do not easily reduce the dose or stop the medication.
According to the standards issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), testosterone phenylpropionate belongs to safety class X during pregnancy: studies in animals or humans have shown that it can cause abnormalities in the fetus, and adverse reactions based on research and development or post-marketing or research in humans Data, there is strong evidence of the risk to human fetuses, so the risk of using such drugs in pregnant women clearly exceeds the potential benefits.