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  • QFS Adephos

    I would like to have some feedback from Adephos users.

    -Anyone noticed better endurance when coming off?

    -Any side effect?
    "I do not think much of a man who is not wiser today than he was yesterday."
    -Abe Lincoln

  • #2
    what is this stuff?
    "Ideas are more powerful than guns. We would not let our enemies have guns, why should we let them have ideas."
    - Joseph Stalin



    Power perceived is power achieved.

    Unless you are the lead dog, the view never changes.

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    • #3
      Works Cited 3Vandoo

      QFS Adephos is an injectable Adenosine Triphosphatre (ATP) at 250mg/ml.

      -Adephos is a coronary and skeletal muscle vasodilator

      -Adephos is used effectively in anticipation of severe cardiac and muscle exertion.

      -Adephos is useful as an aid in the prevention of muscle cramping.

      -Adephos produces improved myocardial cell perfusion

      Administer two injections: one 24 hours before strenuous exercise, and a second injection 4-6 hours prior to anticpated strenuous exercise, by the intramuscular route. The volume of each injection is 1-2cc

      Alternatively Adephos can be administered daily for a general energy boost at a dosage of 0.5cc via IM injection

      Now for the good stuff. If you hit a vein while administering Adephos several things will happen in this order.

      1) You will inhale deeply
      2) Your blood vessels will dilate to a fire hose diameter
      3) Due to the lack of blood pressure you will hit the floor
      4) You will wake up 15-20 seconds later and go "What the fuck was that?"
      5) You will carry on with you day with no will effects other than a bruised ass. Hopefully you hit nothing else on the way down

      I have seen this happen several times. Scary as hell the first time, although it gets funnier every time since you know the person will be 100% in a few seconds.

      DO NOT INJECT THIS INTO A VEIN UNLESS YOU ARE NOT FOUND OF A VERTICAL POSITION

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      • #4
        haven't tried it... watch out for the sides, lol

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        • #5
          Originally posted by LOCO
          haven't tried it... watch out for the sides, lol

          Passing out from injecting it... hum... not that bad!!!

          ...j/k
          "I do not think much of a man who is not wiser today than he was yesterday."
          -Abe Lincoln

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Governor
            what is this stuff?

            adenosine triphosphate (Adephos):

            (ATP), energy-carrying molecule found in the cells of all living things. ATP captures chemical energy obtained from the breakdown of food molecules and releases it to fuel other cellular processes.

            Cells require chemical energy for three general types of tasks: to drive metabolic reactions that would not occur automatically; to transport needed substances across membranes; and to do mechanical work, such as moving muscles. ATP is not a storage molecule for chemical energy; that is the job of carbohydrates, such as glycogen, and fats. When energy is needed by the cell, it is converted from storage molecules into ATP. ATP then serves as a shuttle, delivering energy to places within the cell where energy-consuming activities are taking place.

            ATP is a nucleotide that consists of three main structures: the nitrogenous base, adenine; the sugar, ribose; and a chain of three phosphate groups bound to ribose. The phosphate tail of ATP is the actual power source which the cell taps. Available energy is contained in the bonds between the phosphates and is released when they are broken, which occurs through the addition of a water molecule (a process called hydrolysis). Usually only the outer phosphate is removed from ATP to yield energy and the form of the nucleotide having only two phosphates, adenosine diphosphate (ADP).
            ATP is able to power cellular processes by transferring a phosphate group to another molecule (a process called phosphorylation). This transfer is carried out by special enzymes that couple the release of energy from ATP to cellular activities that require energy.

            Although cells continuously break down ATP to obtain energy, ATP also is constantly being synthesized from ADP and phosphate through the processes of cellular respiration. Most of the ATP in cells is produced by the enzyme ATP synthase, which converts ADP and phosphate to ATP. ATP synthase is located in the membrane of cellular structures called mitochondria; in plant cells, the enzyme also is found in chloroplasts. The central role of ATP in energy metabolism was discovered by Fritz Albert Lipmann and Herman Kalckar in 1941.

            Explore the fact-checked online encyclopedia from Encyclopaedia Britannica with hundreds of thousands of objective articles, biographies, videos, and images from experts.
            "I do not think much of a man who is not wiser today than he was yesterday."
            -Abe Lincoln

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            • #7
              cool...damn QFS is coming out with good shit.
              "Ideas are more powerful than guns. We would not let our enemies have guns, why should we let them have ideas."
              - Joseph Stalin



              Power perceived is power achieved.

              Unless you are the lead dog, the view never changes.

              Comment

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