Bonesmashing doesnt work

D

Deleted member 142795

Iron
Joined
Apr 18, 2025
Posts
66
Reputation
22
If breaking a bone made it better, evolution would have discovered that before the internet did.


Instead bone biology is designed to undo damage not reward it. Fracture healing restores the original structure and then removes excess material. If smashing produced superior bones, orthopedics would use hammers.
 
  • +1
Reactions: mohito and chudpiller
If breaking a bone made it better, evolution would have discovered that before the internet did.


Instead bone biology is designed to undo damage not reward it. Fracture healing restores the original structure and then removes excess material. If smashing produced superior bones, orthopedics would use hammers.
yeah but androgenic says it works so wy gotta say about that
 
  • JFL
  • +1
Reactions: domcel, Deleted member 303171, BR32 and 3 others
If breaking a bone made it better, evolution would have discovered that before the internet did.


Instead bone biology is designed to undo damage not reward it. Fracture healing restores the original structure and then removes excess material. If smashing produced superior bones, orthopedics would use hammers.
boi
 
It does work it just takes weeks to months to see genuine growth
 
  • Hmm...
Reactions: domcel
yeah but androgenic says it works so wy gotta say about that
Androgenic saying it works doesn’t matter. Claims don’t override biology or evidence.
There are zero X-rays, CT scans, or peer-reviewed studies showing permanent bone growth or strengthening from bonesmashing.
 
Androgenic saying it works doesn’t matter. Claims don’t override biology or evidence.
There are zero X-rays, CT scans, or peer-reviewed studies showing permanent bone growth or strengthening from bonesmashing.
okay but look at his before and after pics
 
It does work it just takes weeks to months to see genuine growth
Saying “it works, it just takes weeks to months” isn’t evidence , it’s moving the goalposts. Bone healing always takes weeks to months, and during that time swelling, callus, and fibrosis make things look bigger. Thats no proof
 
  • Hmm...
Reactions: Sprinkles
  • +1
Reactions: Deleted member 142795
Even if it works, it will cause assymetry
youre acting like our faces are even perfectly symmetrical to begin with, if it causes swelling they'll do it in regions that need it
 
youre acting like our faces are even perfectly symmetrical to begin with, if it causes swelling they'll do it in regions that need it
would you rate me?
 
youre acting like our faces are even perfectly symmetrical to begin with, if it causes swelling they'll do it in regions that need it
Our faces are sligthly assymetric. You will make it worse with bonesmashing
 
  • +1
Reactions: Deleted member 142795
If breaking a bone made it better, evolution would have discovered that before the internet did.


Instead bone biology is designed to undo damage not reward it. Fracture healing restores the original structure and then removes excess material. If smashing produced superior bones, orthopedics would use hammers.
Look at before and afters of UFC fighters.
 
If breaking a bone made it better, evolution would have discovered that before the internet did.


Instead bone biology is designed to undo damage not reward it. Fracture healing restores the original structure and then removes excess material. If smashing produced superior bones, orthopedics would use hammers.
even if it doesn’t work, the zygo swelling makes u look better
 
Look at before and afters of UFC fighters.
They undergo chronic sub-failure mechanical loading leading to increased bone mineral density via Wolff’s Law, not macrotrauma. Density changes and cortical optimization are adaptive responses. Fractures trigger callus formation, followed by osteoclastic remodeling back to baseline geometry.
 
  • +1
Reactions: StyIix and cvskll
Isnt it obvious that something like this doesnt work? Like common sense
 
Androgenic saying it works doesn’t matter. Claims don’t override biology or evidence.
There are zero X-rays, CT scans, or peer-reviewed studies showing permanent bone growth or strengthening from bonesmashing.
i agree with you but why did you need chatgpt for that response bro
 
i agree with you but why did you need chatgpt for that response bro
For which one? I studied bone biology and biomechanics
 
  • JFL
  • +1
Reactions: BR32 and TheTD7
If breaking a bone made it better, evolution would have discovered that before the internet did.


Instead bone biology is designed to undo damage not reward it. Fracture healing restores the original structure and then removes excess material. If smashing produced superior bones, orthopedics would use hammers.
Just make surgery atp
 
  • +1
Reactions: StyIix
If breaking a bone made it better, evolution would have discovered that before the internet did.


Instead bone biology is designed to undo damage not reward it. Fracture healing restores the original structure and then removes excess material. If smashing produced superior bones, orthopedics would use hammers.
Proof give me studys boyo stop making bland clames
Isnt it obvious that something like this doesnt work? Like common sense
 
aight son, lemme see why you think it doesn't work
Because bones follow mechanotransduction not superstition.
I could go in-depth, but you couldn‘t really follow..
 
Because bones follow mechanotransduction not superstition.
I could go in-depth, but you couldn‘t really follow..
I can definitely follow, and I'll point out whatever inconsistencies there are (if any, since whatever you're supporting is right so there shouldn't be any).
 
  • +1
Reactions: Deleted member 142795
Proof give me studys boyo stop making bland clames
Orthopedic literature on fracture healing consistently shows this sequence inflammation callus formation osteoblastic repair then osteoclastic remodeling back to baseline geometry. What you will not find is a single peer reviewed study showing permanent increases in bone size or shape from blunt trauma alone.
 
I can definitely follow, and I'll point out whatever inconsistencies there are (if any, since whatever you're supporting is right so there shouldn't be any).
Bone is a regulated system, not an upgrade mechanic. It adapts only under controlled, sub-failure strain where osteocytes can quantify load and adjust mineral density. Once you exceed that threshold you trigger fracture repair, u don‘t trigger adaptation.
 
@sxurf give me studies supporting your claims
 
@sxurf give me studies supporting your claims

The one I used most recently. I have used dozens tho, feel free to ask for more if this shouldn‘t be enough🤗
 

The one I used most recently. I have used dozens tho, feel free to ask for more if this shouldn‘t be enough🤗
Yeah give me more
 
I can definitely follow, and I'll point out whatever inconsistencies there are (if any, since whatever you're supporting is right so there shouldn't be any).
Was keeping up possible?🙂
 
Bone is a regulated system, not an upgrade mechanic. It adapts only under controlled, sub-failure strain where osteocytes can quantify load and adjust mineral density. Once you exceed that threshold you trigger fracture repair, u don‘t trigger adaptation.
yeah, that seems very accurate.

but,

the "threshold" is a range, not a single line. the mechanostat model has a range of optimal strain (between the MES for adaptation and the MES for microdamage).
adaptation doesn't happen during the load itself but during the subsequent recovery period. the osteocyte signal shd be followed by anabolic processes.
the system's "set points" are influenced by hormones (E, T, PTH, vit D), nutritiom and age. Cuz in estrogen deficiency the set point shifts making the bone less responsive to mechanical strain and more susceptible to resorption at LOWER strain levels.
 
Yeah give me more

 
If breaking a bone made it better, evolution would have discovered that before the internet did.


Instead bone biology is designed to undo damage not reward it. Fracture healing restores the original structure and then removes excess material. If smashing produced superior bones, orthopedics would use hammers.
shut the fuck up
 
okay but look at his before and after pics
IMG 5026
 
  • JFL
Reactions: Deleted member 142795
yeah, that seems very accurate.

but,

the "threshold" is a range, not a single line. the mechanostat model has a range of optimal strain (between the MES for adaptation and the MES for microdamage).
adaptation doesn't happen during the load itself but during the subsequent recovery period. the osteocyte signal shd be followed by anabolic processes.
the system's "set points" are influenced by hormones (E, T, PTH, vit D), nutritiom and age. Cuz in estrogen deficiency the set point shifts making the bone less responsive to mechanical strain and more susceptible to resorption at LOWER strain levels.
Yes the threshold is a range and yeah adaptation happens during recovery. But that entire framework still operates below structural failure. The upper end of the adaptive window is explicitly defined as the point before microdamage accumulates faster than it can be repaired. Once you cross into macrodamage the signal changes qualitatively. Osteocytes near the fracture undergo apoptosis, local mechanosensing is lost and the dominant program becomes inflammatory repair not anabolic optimization.
Estrogen deficiency lowering the resorption threshold actually strengthens the argument against bonesmashing because it shows how regulated and conservative the system is.
 
  • +1
Reactions: TheTD7
Saying “it works, it just takes weeks to months” isn’t evidence , it’s moving the goalposts. Bone healing always takes weeks to months, and during that time swelling, callus, and fibrosis make things look bigger. Thats no proof

dude if it takes weeks or months to heal bones you’re doing something wrong

it only takes a couple days or so which creates smaller mm of bone after you heal each time which slowly builds up
 
shut the fuck up
Most reasonable argument that has any chance on this topic. Thanks for presenting ur intellectual intelligence.
 
  • +1
Reactions: sivsiii
  • Hmm...
Reactions: nel9d
dude if it takes weeks or months to heal bones you’re doing something wrong

it only takes a couple days or so which creates smaller mm of bone after you heal each time which slowly builds up
Cortical bone cannot heal in days. Mineralized bone formation alone takes weeks because osteoid deposition mineralization and remodeling are time dependent processes. What happens in a couple of days is inflammation and edema. No new bone is being added then.
 

more (y)
 
  • +1
Reactions: mohito
Yes the threshold is a range and yeah adaptation happens during recovery. But that entire framework still operates below structural failure. The upper end of the adaptive window is explicitly defined as the point before microdamage accumulates faster than it can be repaired. Once you cross into macrodamage the signal changes qualitatively. Osteocytes near the fracture undergo apoptosis, local mechanosensing is lost and the dominant program becomes inflammatory repair not anabolic optimization.
Estrogen deficiency lowering the resorption threshold actually strengthens the argument against bonesmashing because it shows how regulated and conservative the system is.
the final stages of fracture healing do involve intense anabolic bone formation to bridge the gap. the only main difference is that this anabolism is not locally optimized for mechanical efficiency in the same way adaptive remodeling is (it is a rapid nd generalized response to restore continuity). the resulting bone (callus) is often kinda like a woven bone that is later remodeled into lamellar bone
 
i do muay thai, and the reason i have good supraorbital bone forward growth and my shins being as strong as steel is because i kept getting punched in the face and kept hitting my shins against metal and bags
 

Similar threads

shyaa
Replies
39
Views
828
shyaa
shyaa
F
Replies
6
Views
415
faasteey7
F
viper__7
Replies
29
Views
1K
viper__7
viper__7
Xevvyi
Replies
21
Views
844
Azie555
Azie555
VrillFatNoob24
Replies
29
Views
2K
psltristan1
psltristan1

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top