02-12-2016, 07:11 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-12-2016, 07:29 AM by Dynseli.
Edit Reason: clarification
)
IGF works because it raises hormones that cause breast development. Any injection of hormones is unsafe, because that is an overload. It causes hormonal imbalances, its symptoms and is a risk for cancer. Desensitization makes it difficult for cancer therapies to work against cancer.
I wrote that Wikiversity article and a few others in that directory entirely at that time. Then an editor who was a Doctor later removed a lot, because it was too preemptive. That was a good thing, because it made me improve the information. I don't know how much it changed, in the last year because I left that whole project due to it being a toxic troll haven. Breast Nexus doesn't have those problems, which is why it's a good atmosphere. Wikiversity in itself is unreliable, unless those who write individual articles take it seriously. There were medical professionals that looked over medical articles a few years back when I left that project. Anything I brought over from Wikiversity, which I wrote, I rewrote and improved, so I didn't have to credit the hosting project, which participants were disgusting. I wrote that, anyway.
I edited breast development at Wikipedia, where I started adding about progesterone, prolactin and more specifics about estrogens on breast development. That definitely has been updated since then. I wish I never contributed to those wiki projects.
I don't know who started the hormonal breast development article, and wrote a lot on it, before I left, but I suspected that it was someone from Breastnexus. I didn't contribute to that hormonal breast development article.
I wrote that Wikiversity article and a few others in that directory entirely at that time. Then an editor who was a Doctor later removed a lot, because it was too preemptive. That was a good thing, because it made me improve the information. I don't know how much it changed, in the last year because I left that whole project due to it being a toxic troll haven. Breast Nexus doesn't have those problems, which is why it's a good atmosphere. Wikiversity in itself is unreliable, unless those who write individual articles take it seriously. There were medical professionals that looked over medical articles a few years back when I left that project. Anything I brought over from Wikiversity, which I wrote, I rewrote and improved, so I didn't have to credit the hosting project, which participants were disgusting. I wrote that, anyway.
I edited breast development at Wikipedia, where I started adding about progesterone, prolactin and more specifics about estrogens on breast development. That definitely has been updated since then. I wish I never contributed to those wiki projects.
I don't know who started the hormonal breast development article, and wrote a lot on it, before I left, but I suspected that it was someone from Breastnexus. I didn't contribute to that hormonal breast development article.