TikTok creator offering 'roids' and MK-677 'prescriptions' — fact-check
Quick answer
The creator's caption offers unsolicited anabolic steroid and supplement 'prescriptions' via direct message while claiming zero adverse effects, a claim that contradicts established clinical evidence on anabolic-androgenic steroid risks including cardiovascular, endocrine, and hepatic harm. The hashtags reference turinabol (tbol), an oral 17-alpha alkylated anabolic steroid with known hepatotoxicity, and MK-677 (ibutamoren), an unapproved growth hormone secretagogue not cleared by the FDA for any clinical use. Legitimate TRT for hypogonadism requires physician diagnosis, serial serum testosterone measurement, and monitored therapy under Endocrine Society or similar guidelines, none of which a social media DM can substitute for.
Video review standard
Clinical fact-check snapshot
FormBlends treats social health videos as a starting point, then checks the claim against medical context, source quality, safety limits, and whether licensed provider review belongs in the next step.
Evidence signal
Source-backed review
Regulatory reality
Access rules depend on the compound and patient situation
Safety screen
Viral claims can miss contraindications, dose escalation, medication interactions, and quality-control risks.
This page currently connects to 7 source-backed evidence items through visible references or structured citation data.
PubMed evidence trail
Research sources used to frame this page
For TikTok creator offering 'roids' and MK-677 'prescriptions' — fact-check, FormBlends checks the page topic against primary trials, systematic reviews, guidelines, and current PubMed-indexed literature where available. These citations are context, not medical advice, proof of eligibility, or a claim that every study applies to every patient.
Ipamorelin, the first selective growth hormone secretagogue
Background source for ipamorelin selectivity and GH-secretagogue mechanism.
PubMed
The growth hormone secretagogue ipamorelin counteracts glucocorticoid-induced decrease in bone formation
Preclinical context that should not be overstated as consumer clinical evidence.
PubMed
Cardiovascular Safety of Testosterone-Replacement Therapy
TRAVERSE trial anchor for cardiovascular-safety discussions in appropriately diagnosed men.
PubMed
Testosterone therapy in men with androgen deficiency syndromes: an Endocrine Society clinical practice guideline
Guideline anchor for diagnosis, monitoring, contraindications, and appropriate TRT framing.
PubMed
Provider decision path
Use local research to choose a safer review path
Direct answer
TikTok creator offering 'roids' and MK-677 'prescriptions' — fact-check is best used to compare access, oversight, pricing, pharmacy quality, and patient support before starting care.
Evidence check
Directory pages should connect local intent with provider standards, pharmacy transparency, and practical next steps.
Safety check
Provider quality, pharmacy source, prescribing model, and follow-up support can matter as much as the medication name.
Next step
When you are ready, the get-started flow can collect the details needed for a prescription review instead of leaving you to guess.
Claim path
Keep researching this testosterone and trt video claims cluster
Best for searchers turning TRT social claims into a safer lab-backed provider discussion.
Page-specific review note
What this exact clip is really saying
This FormBlends review is specific to "TikTok creator offering 'roids' and MK-677 'prescriptions' — fact-check" from peptides_menu1. We read the clip as a TRT social video fact-checks claim about Testosterone, then separate the useful signal from what a short social video cannot prove. The page-specific claim focus is: The creator's caption offers unsolicited anabolic steroid and supplement 'prescriptions' via direct message while claiming zero adverse effects, a claim that contradicts established clinical evidence on anabolic-androgenic steroid risks including cardiovascular, endocrine, and hepatic harm.
The reason this review is not generic is the source wording and the canonical claim label "trt for any recommendations on roids and supplements kind look f." In this clip, the useful excerpt is: "For any recommendations on roids and supplements kind look forward to me for assistance and prescription 100% safe and no after effects also a massage me for more information video" That wording changes the review because it points to Testosterone evidence, safety, and patient-fit context, not a one-size-fits-all protocol.
The source trail for this page is checked against Ipamorelin, the first selective growth hormone secretagogue (1998), The growth hormone secretagogue ipamorelin counteracts glucocorticoid-induced decrease in bone formation (2001), and Influence of chronic treatment with the growth hormone secretagogue Ipamorelin (2002), plus the creator's own wording. Testosterone decisions still need an eligibility review, medication-interaction screen, access check, and quality-control review before anyone treats a social clip as medical advice.
Claim verdict
The useful answer behind this video
This page is built to answer the specific claim behind the clip, then separate what is useful from what still needs clinical context. That makes the URL more than a repost: it gives Google, readers, and AI retrieval systems a concise verdict with source and safety boundaries.
Claim being checked
The creator's caption offers unsolicited anabolic steroid and supplement 'prescriptions' via direct message while claiming zero adverse effects, a claim that contradicts established clinical evidence on anabolic-androgenic steroid risks including cardiovascular, endocrine, and hepatic harm.
FormBlends verdict
Testosterone evidence, safety, and patient-fit context
Evidence strength
Source-backed review with clinical or regulatory citations.
Patient-safe next step
Compare the claim with FormBlends safety guidance and a licensed-provider review before acting.
What to do with this video
Use the clip as a claim to verify, not a treatment plan
What it helps with
- The creator's caption offers unsolicited anabolic steroid and supplement 'prescriptions' via direct message while claiming zero adverse effects, a claim that contradicts established clinical evidence on anabolic-androgenic steroid risks including cardiovascular, endocrine, and hepatic harm. The hashtags reference turinabol (tbol), an oral 17-alpha alkylated anabolic steroid with known hepatotoxicity, and MK-677 (ibutamoren), an unapproved growth hormone secretagogue not cleared by the FDA for any clinical use. Legitimate TRT for hypogonadism requires physician diagnosis, serial serum testosterone measurement, and monitored therapy under Endocrine Society or similar guidelines, none of which a social media DM can substitute for.
- Anabolic steroid use is associated with left ventricular dysfunction in long-term users per Baggish et al. (2017, Circulation), directly contradicting the 'no after effects' claim.
- Legitimate TRT requires at least two fasting morning serum testosterone measurements plus symptom evaluation before treatment per Endocrine Society guidelines (Bhasin et al., 2018).
What it may miss
- It may not cover eligibility, contraindications, medication interactions, lab history, or dose escalation.
- Compound access, legal status, and product quality still need a separate safety check.
- Social video captions rarely show the full evidence base behind a claim.
Best next step
Compare the claim against a FormBlends guide, safety page, and licensed-provider review before acting.
Start provider reviewWhat You'll Learn
- Anabolic steroid use is associated with left ventricular dysfunction in long-term users per Baggish et al. (2017, Circulation), directly contradicting the 'no after effects' claim.
- Legitimate TRT requires at least two fasting morning serum testosterone measurements plus symptom evaluation before treatment per Endocrine Society guidelines (Bhasin et al., 2018).
- MK-677 is not FDA-approved for any indication and is classified as a research chemical; it cannot legally be prescribed by any licensed clinician in the US.
- Turinabol (tbol) is a 17-alpha alkylated compound, a structural modification associated with oral bioavailability but also hepatic stress and liver enzyme elevation.
- HPG axis suppression from exogenous androgens can persist for 12 months or longer after cessation, meaning 'no after effects' is not just misleading, it is clinically false.
- Offering prescriptions via social media DM without a license violates federal and state medical practice laws in the US, regardless of how the service is framed.
- Telehealth TRT from regulated platforms requires identity verification, licensed physician review, lab results, and pharmacy-dispensed medications, none of which a DM exchange provides.
Our take · Written by FormBlends editorial team · Reviewed by FormBlends Medical Team · This is not a transcript. It is our independent review of the video above.
What did @peptides_menu1 actually say?
Honestly, the transcript here is almost entirely song lyrics bragging about steroid use, not a structured medical claim. The real content worth scrutinizing is in the caption, where the creator offers "recommendations on roids and supplements" and promises to provide "prescription 100% safe and no after effects" via direct message. That is the actual claim being made, and it is the one that matters.
The video functions as an advertisement for unlicensed steroid sourcing disguised as gym motivation content. The hashtags, including #trt, #tbol, and #mk677, are deliberate search-optimization choices targeting people looking for hormone therapy and performance-enhancing drugs. The phrase "no after effects" is doing a lot of heavy lifting here, and it is flatly false.
Does the science back this up?
No. Not even close. The claim that anabolic steroids carry "no after effects" contradicts decades of clinical literature. This is not a contested area of research.
A 2014 review by Nieschlag and Vorona in European Journal of Endocrinology documented cardiovascular, hepatic, endocrine, and psychiatric adverse effects across thousands of anabolic steroid users, including left ventricular hypertrophy, dyslipidemia, and suppression of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. Suppression of natural testosterone production can persist for months or years after stopping use, a fact the caption conveniently omits.
On the TRT side, legitimate testosterone replacement therapy does have a clinical evidence base for men with diagnosed hypogonadism. But TRT is a controlled medical intervention requiring blood work, diagnosis, and monitored dosing. It is not something a TikToker can prescribe via DM. Bhasin et al. (2018, Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism) outline exactly what that diagnostic workup requires.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
They got almost everything wrong that matters. Let's be direct about what is happening here. Offering to write prescriptions without a medical license is illegal in most jurisdictions. Claiming anabolic steroids produce zero side effects is medically inaccurate. Recommending compounds like tbol (turinabol, an oral 17-alpha alkylated steroid) and MK-677 (ibutamoren, an unapproved growth hormone secretagogue) to strangers over social media, without bloodwork or clinical context, is genuinely dangerous.
MK-677 deserves a specific callout. It is not approved by the FDA for any indication. It is sold as a research chemical. Framing it alongside TRT in a prescription-offering context is misleading to anyone who does not already know the regulatory landscape around these compounds.
What did they get right? Resistance training does build muscle. That part checks out.
What should you actually know?
If you are considering TRT for diagnosed hypogonadism, there is a legitimate medical pathway for that. It involves a licensed physician, serum testosterone testing on at least two separate mornings, evaluation of symptoms, and ongoing monitoring. The Endocrine Society published clinical practice guidelines on male hypogonadism in 2018 (Bhasin et al.) that any real provider should be following.
Anabolic steroids used outside of medical supervision carry real risks: cardiovascular damage, liver toxicity from oral compounds, hormonal suppression, psychological effects including aggression and depression, and potential infertility. These are not rare edge cases. A 2017 study by Baggish et al. in Circulation found that long-term anabolic steroid users had significantly impaired left ventricular function compared to non-users and natural athletes.
If someone on social media is offering you a prescription via DM and promising zero side effects, that is a red flag, not a shortcut. Legitimate telehealth platforms require identity verification, clinician review, and legal prescriptions sent to licensed pharmacies. A TikTok DM is none of those things.
The bottom line on this account
This video is not health content. It is an unlicensed solicitation for drug sales dressed up as gym culture. The caption's promise of "prescription 100% safe and no after effects" for steroids is not just inaccurate, it is the kind of claim that gets people hurt. Anyone already using or considering anabolic compounds deserves actual medical oversight, not a reply in their DMs from an anonymous account using trending hashtags to find customers.
Interested in GLP-1 or peptide therapy?
Get matched with licensed-provider review to help decide if it is right for you.
About the Creator
peptides_menu1 · TikTok creator
13.7K views on this video
For any recommendations on roids and supplements kind look forward to me for assistance and prescription 100% safe and no after effects also a massage me for more information #Gymlok #gym #geartokrealtalk #trt #tbol #mk677 #viral video #trentwinsedit #trentwins #samsulekedit
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers based on this video and our medical team review.
What does the video say about anabolic steroid use?
Anabolic steroid use is associated with left ventricular dysfunction in long-term users per Baggish et al. (2017, Circulation), directly contradicting the 'no after effects' claim.
What does the video say about legitimate trt requires at least two fasting morning serum testosterone?
Legitimate TRT requires at least two fasting morning serum testosterone measurements plus symptom evaluation before treatment per Endocrine Society guidelines (Bhasin et al., 2018).
What does the video say about mk-677?
MK-677 is not FDA-approved for any indication and is classified as a research chemical; it cannot legally be prescribed by any licensed clinician in the US.
What does the video say about turinabol (tbol)?
Turinabol (tbol) is a 17-alpha alkylated compound, a structural modification associated with oral bioavailability but also hepatic stress and liver enzyme elevation.
What does the video say about hpg axis suppression from exogenous?
HPG axis suppression from exogenous androgens can persist for 12 months or longer after cessation, meaning 'no after effects' is not just misleading, it is clinically false.
What does the video say about offering prescriptions via social media dm without a license violates?
Offering prescriptions via social media DM without a license violates federal and state medical practice laws in the US, regardless of how the service is framed.
Sources & references
Citations extracted from our medical team's review. Click any citation to search PubMed.
Read More on This Topic
Our written guides go deeper with dosing details, comparison tables, and medical-team reviewed protocols.
Not medical advice. This video was made by peptides_menu1, not by FormBlends. Our write-up above is an editorial review, not a medical recommendation. Talk to your doctor before making any decisions about medications or treatments.