N17-E

This is for Bill or Brock,
How long after taking N17-E could someone pass a drug test. Would it be the same as nandrolone? Or would it be different. Thanks, for the help if you get a chance to answer this.

i’m certainly not bill or brock, but the answer would probably lie in whether the 17b-cyclopent-1’-enyl ether that makes the product a “sellable” nandrolone is in fact an ester (such as acetate, propionate, or anything that makes the steroids’ half-lives longer). while i kind of doubt they could sell a product with an ester in it, i guess the only people that can answer this is the biotest men themselves.

N-17E is not an ester, but I’d still think
you could fail a drug test for many months
after use. Some portion of the nandrolone
released in the body by the N-17E will
be esterified within the body to very long
chain esters, particularly the stearate
ester, and this tiny fraction of the nandrolone
will stay around for a very long time. The
clearance time problem might be every bit
as bad as with Deca.

Thanks for the answer, Bill. It was sort of what I figured but thought I’d ask anyway.

Bill how does the hormone nandrolone affect the body. I know how T does but not nandrolone.

Nandrolone is very effective at the androgen receptor, one of the main means of causing
muscle growth, though this means not in itself sufficient
for maximal growth. Nandrolone is the active
hormone provided by Deca after metabolism.
It has the advantages compared to testosterone
of low conversion to estrogen, much milder
on hair and skin, and for some reason not
known to me, good for joints. It has the
disadvantage that at high doses (for most
users, over 400 mg/week) it can be somewhat
of a depressant or have adverse effects on
libido. This is strictly dose-dependent and
not a problem when the dose is appropriate
for the individual.

Nandrosol, after metabolism, delivers some
amount of nandrolone, but as a guess (based
on results of Androsol study, so just a guess)
this amount is comparable to usage of only
100 or 200 mg/week Deca at most, and probably
not 200. With N-17E we’re expecting to get
blood levels comparable to 400 mg/week Deca
usage. We should, BTW, have some T-17E blood
levels determined in a week or two, though
it may be a little longer before they’re officially
reported.