
Originally Posted by
Maybach
A thought about John, the final caller who called in with a question about myasthenia gravis: it seems that the disease represents a straightforward impairment of neuromuscular efficiency. It is literally a disease which affects the signaling of muscle contraction, which means that sufferers cannot as efficiently call their muscles into contraction. With that in mind, the standard proscription for populations with limited NME (females and the elderly), that is, triples, would seem to be the ticket. If John or anyone else who suffers from a similar condition is reading this, it'd be interesting to see how that works. The recommendation against sets across might still hold, since there is also an probably effect on recovery through diminished parasympathetic activation (probably the source of the squeamishness on the part of the doctors about TRT. You get similar ill conceived caution occurring about disorders like Cushing's and Addison's).