- Joined
- Nov 2, 2024
It’s a thing. Here’s a tranny relaying what his doctor said to him about the issue:Don't their moob nipples do that as a result of dosing e incorrectly? They take too much, too fast or something. It was mentioned in the DIY HRT thread.
Post by “carattansgirl” on: Reddit, r/MTF, November 2024.
Title: My endocrinologist says that dosing too high too early causes "unnatural breast growth"? He says they grow "tubular" or something.. he says like Dolly Parton (pointy)?
Text: Anyone know anything about this? I just got off the 1 month phone call checkin with him and the above was his response when I asked if I can increase the dose from 1g estradiol gel per day to 2...
My take? That both of these men do Mrs. Dolly “Parton” Dean a terrible disservice. Thankfully, another troon jumps in to tell the doctor off:
Title: My endocrinologist says that dosing too high too early causes "unnatural breast growth"? He says they grow "tubular" or something.. he says like Dolly Parton (pointy)?
Text: Anyone know anything about this? I just got off the 1 month phone call checkin with him and the above was his response when I asked if I can increase the dose from 1g estradiol gel per day to 2...
My take? That both of these men do Mrs. Dolly “Parton” Dean a terrible disservice. Thankfully, another troon jumps in to tell the doctor off:
Gotta love some troon on Reddit comparing himself to a natal female while injecting himself with exogenous steroids. Effective fail, indeed.Effective-Fail2897 said:No, it is not true, it is just a rumor spread by incompetent / ignorant people. Tuberous breasts are a congenital morphological anomaly. It is of embryonic origin and manifests itself in adolescence, when the young girl reaches puberty. Breast growth is then slowed down by the presence of abnormal breast tissue which prevents them from developing properly.
What is the cause of tuberous breasts? It is thought to be a problem during embryogenesis that will only appear in adolescence when the breasts grow. This breast malformation is probably congenital but not hereditary, "that is to say, it is most often not transmissible".
fey0n said:There are studies that hint at smaller/unsatisfactory breast growth if E levels are too high too early. But AFAIK nothing about tubular or unnatural ones.
Sorry I don't have the links right now!
This reminds me of woke podcaster Matt Christman’s take on Jordan Peterson. Kids are told by their parents to clean their room all the time. It only becomes real when their Internet dad-friend tells them to do it. The tranny decides to listen to his doctor’s recommendations after another tranny vouches for the idea. He dodged a bullet. Lucky for fay0n, I do have the links and will get to that.carattansgirl said:Thank you, I'll follow drs recommendations![]()
Anyway, there is evidence that mismanaged cross-sex hormones can cause unusual or tuberous development. See Yaser et al. 2021; or McLaughlin fitting name et al. 2024; archived below. There is even evidence that trannies inherently develop fucked up moobs. Here’s a quote from an exceedingly funny scientific paper:
Turns out that one genetic risk factor in tuberous breasts is being male.Nauta et al. 2019 said:These observations suggest that the trans breast is phenotypically similar to a mildly tuberous breast, which is perhaps consistent with arrested development between Tanner stages 2 and 4.
Text: Fig. 1. Illustration of all 3 body type classifications in transgender patients, compared with the most common cis-mesomorph body type. [Editor’s note: From left to right, trans-ectomorph, trans-mesomorph, trans-endomorph, and cis-mesomorph.]
This basically means a skinny man, an average sized man, a fat man, and an average woman. According to the authors, the most common body type for the men was endomorph. So dainty, so feminine. In their words:
Basically? Trannies are fat, gross, and crazy. Furthermore, their tits show less drooping or sagging (“ptosis”). You wanna know why? Because estrogen makes people stretchy and they’re not women.Nauta et al. 2019 said:Trans-female patients were older (40.37 versus 34.07), more likely to have psychological comorbidities (50% versus 12.23%), and had a higher body mass index, 27.46 kg/m2 versus 22.88 kg/m2 (P= 1.91E-07), than cis-female patients. Cis-female patients most commonly had an ectomorph body habitus (52% versus 26%), whereas trans-female patients most commonly had an endomorph body habitus (40% versus 7%). Pseudoptosis or ptosis was more commonly seen in cis-female patients (P = 0.0056).
Attachments
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Nauta et al. 2019 - Differences in Chest Measurements between the Cis-female and Trans-female ...pdf729.9 KB · Views: 30
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Yaser et al. - Correction of Areolar Protuberance During Augmentation Mammoplasty in Transfema...pdf1.1 MB · Views: 22
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McLaughlin et al. 2024 - Evaluating Access and Outcomes in Gender-affirming Breast Augmentatio.pdf681.5 KB · Views: 25
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