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High-resolution image of a white, resealable stand-up pouch labeled 'S4 1g, Batch No.005, 29-10-2025', standing upright against a neutral beige background – product packaging for SARMs (Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators) supplement
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S4(Andarine) 1g

€25,00 EUR
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                                            NOT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION

S4 (Andarine, GTx-007) is a nonsteroidal selective androgen receptor modulator (SARM) developed by GTx for osteoporosis, muscle wasting, and benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). It binds the androgen receptor (AR) with tissue-selective, partial agonist activity—aiming to stimulate bone and muscle while sparing prostate and hair follicles relative to testosterone/DHT. Clinical development never reached approval; most human data are early-phase. It is not approved for any indication and is prohibited by WADA.


Additional Benefits of S-4 Now Under Investigation

Benefit Key take-aways
1 Lean mass preservation In animal and early human studies, S-4 increases lean body mass and muscle strength or preserves them during hypogonadism or caloric deficit, with less virilization than anabolic steroids at comparable anabolic effect.
2 Bone-density support S-4 improves bone mineral density (BMD) and biomechanical strength in osteopenic/ovariectomized models, mimicking some of testosterone’s skeletal benefits without strong prostate stimulation.
3 Prostate-sparing androgen action In castrated rodent models, S-4 supports muscle/bone while causing less prostate enlargementthan DHT and even reduces prostate weight under some conditions—basis for its BPH program.
4 Functional performance Preclinical work shows increased grip strength, running time, and muscle cross-sectional area, indicating true functional gains, not just water retention.
5 Potential cachexia applications The combination of anabolic and anti-catabolic actions suggests utility for cancer/illness-related cachexia; this remains theoretical and unapproved.
6 Oral delivery S-4 is orally bioavailable, avoiding injections and allowing once- or twice-daily dosing in trials.
7 Lower androgenic load Compared to full AR agonists, S-4’s partial agonism and tissue selectivity lead to less virilization, acne, and prostate stimulation at anabolic doses in preclinical work.
8 Limited aromatization Being nonsteroidal, it does not aromatize to estradiol or reduce 5-α reductase; E2 shifts are secondary (via HPT-axis suppression), not direct conversion.
9 Conceptual stacking with other SARMs In research, S-4 has been explored as a bone-/cutting-biased SARM alongside more potent anabolic SARMs; this is entirely experimental and not clinically validated.

2. Molecular Mechanism of Action

2.1 Receptor pharmacodynamics

  • Target: Andarine binds the androgen receptor (AR) as a partial agonist with a distinct co-activator recruitment profile compared to DHT/testosterone.

  • Tissue selectivity:

    • Skeletal muscle & bone: Acts more like an agonist, promoting protein synthesis, antiresorptive signaling, and osteoblastic activity.

    • Prostate & reproductive tissues: Behaves less strongly than DHT; in some models, functions almost as a functional antagonist by competing with endogenous androgens.

2.2 Down-stream biology

Pathway Functional outcome Context
AR–ARE transcription ↑ Myofibrillar protein synthesis, ↓ proteolysis Skeletal muscle
RANKL/OPG balance & osteoblast activity ↑ BMD, ↑ bone strength Bone
Prostate AR partial agonism ↓ Prostate weight vs DHT at equal anabolic effect BPH models
HPT-axis feedback ↓ LH/FSH → ↓ endogenous T with chronic use Systemic endocrine

3. Pharmacokinetics (from early studies & preclinical data)

  • Route: Oral, typically once or twice daily in trials.

  • Half-life: On the order of hours (short–moderate); supports BID dosing in many experimental protocols.

  • Absorption: Good oral bioavailability; lipophilic.

  • Distribution: Binds AR in muscle, bone, prostate, and other AR-rich tissues; crosses into many organs.

  • Metabolism: Hepatic metabolic clearance; exact CYP profile not publicly characterized.

  • Excretion: Primarily renal and biliary as metabolites.


4. Pre-clinical & Clinical Evidence

  • Osteoporosis/Bone models: S-4 restored BMD and bone strength in ovariectomized rats while keeping prostate size relatively low compared with DHT.

  • Muscle wasting/hypogonadism models: Improved lean mass and strength, outperforming placebo and approaching low-dose testosterone’s anabolic effect with less androgenic tissue impact.

  • BPH/androgen-deprivation settings: Showed ability to maintain muscle/bone under androgen deprivation while not excessively stimulating prostate, making it attractive in theory as an adjunct to androgen-deprivation therapy.

Evidence quality note: Most data are animal studies plus small, early-phase human trials. There are no large Phase 3 data, no approved indications, and the full risk–benefit profile at therapeutic doses remains incompletely defined.


5. Emerging Clinical Interests (conceptual)

Field Rationale Status
Male osteoporosis / osteopenia Bone-anabolic + prostate-sparing Preclinical/early clinical
Sarcopenia / frailty Muscle maintenance with lower androgenic load Concept
Cachexia (cancer/HIV/CHF) Anticatabolic, oral, anabolic Preclinical concept
Adjunct in androgen-deprivation (prostate CA) Preserve muscle/bone, not prostate Concept; safety complex
Female osteoporosis (post-menopausal) Bone support without virilization Animal data only

6. Safety and Tolerability

Important: Much of the human safety profile is inferred from limited trial data and off-label/grey-market use, not long, high-quality RCTs.

6.1 Commonly reported / expected

  • Visual disturbances (hallmark of S-4):

    • Yellow tint to vision or altered color perception.

    • Night-vision difficulty (reduced adaptation in low light).

    • Usually dose-related and reversible after discontinuation in reports; likely due to S-4 or its metabolites affecting retinal signaling (exact mechanism uncertain).

  • Endocrine suppression:

    • Decreased LH/FSH, total and free testosterone with prolonged exposure.

    • Potential testicular atrophy and transient subfertility with chronic use.

  • Androgenic/skin: Mild acne, oily skin, hair shedding in susceptible individuals—generally milder than full androgenic steroids at equivalent anabolic effect.

  • Lipids: HDL reduction and possible LDL increase, as with many androgens/SARMs.

  • Liver: Mild ALT/AST elevations reported anecdotally; robust hepatotoxicity data are lacking but caution is appropriate.

6.2 Less common / theoretical

  • Cardiometabolic: Possible BP increases, hematocrit drift, and unknown long-term cardiovascular risk.

  • Mood/neurologic: Some users report irritability, decreased libido with endogenous suppression; data are anecdotal.

  • Reproductive: Potential impact on spermatogenesis and fertility with long-term use; recovery time after cessation is not well characterized.

  • Oncology: Long-term tumor risk with chronic partial AR stimulation/inhibition has not been mapped; caution in anyone with a history of hormone-sensitive cancers.

6.3 Anti-doping / legal status

  • WADA: SARMs (including S-4/Andarine) are prohibited at all times (S1.2 anabolic agents).

  • Regulation: S-4 is not an approved medication; many jurisdictions treat SARMs sold for human consumption as unlawful or controlled. Grey-market powders/capsules often have mislabeling and contamination.


7. Comparative Snapshot (SARMs & anabolics)

Feature S-4 (Andarine) LGD-4033 (Ligandrol) RAD-140 (Testolone) Testosterone (TRT)
AR profile Partial agonist, tissue-selective Potent AR agonist Potent, somewhat selective Full agonist
Bone focus Strong Strong Moderate Strong
Prostate stimulation Lower; sometimes ↓ Moderate Moderate Higher
Vision AEs Characteristic (night/yellow) None typical None typical None
HPT suppression Yes (moderate) Yes (strong) Yes (strong) Yes
Legal/approval Unapproved, SARM ban Unapproved, SARM ban Unapproved, SARM ban Approved (TRT)

8. Regulatory Landscape

  • No approvals in US/EU/UK/most jurisdictions.

  • Used only in research; any therapeutic development has stalled in favor of newer SARMs or different anabolic approaches.

  • Widely sold online as a research chemical, often in non-GMP conditions with unverified purity and dose.


9. Practical Take & Future Directions

  • For now: S-4 is best regarded as a historical SARM prototype and research tool, not a clinical therapy.

  • Main unique point: Its bone-/muscle-anabolic + prostate-sparing profile and distinct visual side effects make it mechanistically interesting but clinically problematic.

  • Research priorities:

    • Detailed characterization of the ocular mechanism and long-term retinal safety.

    • Development of next-generation SARMs that retain S-4’s bone/muscle selectivity without vision issues.

    • More complete mapping of lipid, cardiovascular, and reproductive impacts of AR partial agonism vs full agonism.