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[FONT="]Receptors do get use to having certain amounts of stimulation and without it they respond differently. You don't burn out your androgen receptors you simply get them acclimated to that much gear and they don't respond without that amount of test or AAS in your system. You can change that by changing up your cycles. You can't push your body beyond what it can handle and it adjust to the high level of androgens people put into their bodies.[/FONT]
[FONT="]The receptors don't get burnout. With some drugs they do and it is called excitotoxicity. That is where the receptor are over stimulated and start to die off. Androgen receptors don't work that way. AAS are not stimulants and will not cause such an effect. So basically androgen receptors don't die off, and they don't down regulate, rather up regulate. [/FONT]
[FONT="]That leaves the only other possibility, which would be a decrease in the sensitivity to androgens. Is this a real thing, or does the same genetic level of sensitivity remain consistent?
What do you think ?[/FONT]
[FONT="]The receptors don't get burnout. With some drugs they do and it is called excitotoxicity. That is where the receptor are over stimulated and start to die off. Androgen receptors don't work that way. AAS are not stimulants and will not cause such an effect. So basically androgen receptors don't die off, and they don't down regulate, rather up regulate. [/FONT]
[FONT="]That leaves the only other possibility, which would be a decrease in the sensitivity to androgens. Is this a real thing, or does the same genetic level of sensitivity remain consistent?
What do you think ?[/FONT]