JohnC43 said:whether or not weight lifting worsens your hairloss? It would seem to make sense if it boosts testosterone. What is the experience of people on here?
s.a.f said:Oh yeah lifting weights = baldness definatley.
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s.a.f said:Thats exactly what I'm saying if you dont have the m.p.b gene you can basicly do whatever you want. If you do have it however wether you work out or not eat well or dont you'll still go bald
“Elevated levels of testosterone and excess stress, in some cases, may accelerate the condition,†Leonora said. “But only if there is a genetic predisposition to male pattern baldness.â€
Agree 100%s.a.f said:Accelerate it by what? Maybe you'll hit that NW6 a few months earlier if you're a hardcore weightlifter, but if you think that some minor lifestyle change is going to give you 5-10 extra years of hair or stop you at NW3 instead of NW6 then you're dreaming.
Basicly trying to shape your life around never elevating your DHT is just a good way to waste it.
s.a.f said:And who has proven that you can halt it or even slow it by abstaining from weightlifting/masturbating ect -no one.
s.a.f said:Accelerate it by what? Maybe you'll hit that NW6 a few months earlier if you're a hardcore weightlifter, but if you think that some minor lifestyle change is going to give you 5-10 extra years of hair or stop you at NW3 instead of NW6 then you're dreaming.
Basicly trying to shape your life around never elevating your DHT is just a good way to waste it.
s.a.f said:[quote="s.a.f":3nuixltf]Accelerate it by what? Maybe you'll hit that NW6 a few months earlier if you're a hardcore weightlifter, but if you think that some minor lifestyle change is going to give you 5-10 extra years of hair or stop you at NW3 instead of NW6 then you're dreaming.
Basicly trying to shape your life around never elevating your DHT is just a good way to waste it.
s.a.f said:but this temporary slight increase
Are there any studies showing that this exprapolates to longer time frames? Yes! One study of nine elite weight lifter over a two year period showed significant increases in testosterone, leutenizing hormone and the ratio of testosterone to SHBG. [2] The authors concluded that "the present results suggest that prolonged intensive strength training in elite athletes may influence the pituitary and possibly hypothalamic levels, leading to increased serum levels of testosterone".
Yet another study showed that elite weight lifters had significantly higher testosterone levels than elite cyclists. [5] In other words, the body seems to adapt to the kind of exercise placed before it. In everyday language that means that weight lifting and weigh training very likely lead to increases in testosterone over time. Remember that testosterone seems to be increased by any competitive challenge in the short term. The amazing news is that hitting the weights seems to imprint itself in our glands and force them to spit out more of the precious stuff.
sir chugalot said:Who has claimed you can reverse hair loss by not doing weights?
That's quite a leap.
