Dysphoria
The Shape of Absence
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GSH(Glutathion)
Now here is all the answers about GSH questions and a guide how to use it
What is GSH and How does it work?
Glutathione is the principal intracellular thiol-based antioxidant, present in millimolar concentrations across eukaryotic cells. Its unique tripeptide structure of glutamate, cysteine and glycine underpins a thiol redox couple that detoxifies reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, contributes to xenobiotic clearance, and regulates protein thiol modifications. Glutathione is synthesised in the cytosol via consecutive enzyme-catalysed steps and distributed to subcellular compartments, where it maintains redox homeostasis through reversible conversion between its reduced (GSH) and oxidised (GSSG) forms. This balance underlies cellular survival by supporting antioxidant defence, signal transduction and regulation of cell death pathways. Perturbations of glutathione metabolism are implicated in ageing, neurodegeneration, cardiovascular disease and cancer, where impaired GSH levels contribute to oxidative stress, aberrant ferroptotic cell death and altered immune responses. Therapeutic strategies targeting glutathione synthesis, regeneration and depletion have thus emerged as promising approaches to modulate redox balance in diverse pathological contexts.
Main Goal:
Skin lightening/ whitening— Shifts melanin from dark eumelanin to lighter pheomelanin, inhibits tyrosinase. Popular for overall brighter tone, reducing hyperpigmentation, acne scars, dark spots.
- Clearing uneven skin tone, glow, anti-aging (wrinkles, elasticity).
Sometimes stacked with Vitamin C, NAC, MSM for better absorption/results.
Forms: Oral pills, sublingual, liposomal, topical creams, IV drips (most aggressive and dangerous one).
Benefits:
- Skin lightening: Based on studies (oral 250-500mg/day) show modest reduction in melanin index, especially on sun-exposed areas. Can give 1-2 shades lighter + glow in 4-12 weeks for some.
- Antioxidant glow: Fights oxidative stress, may improve skin elasticity, reduce wrinkles, UV damage.
- Clears hyperpigmentation / melasma in certain studies (topical + oral combo works better).
- General health: Liver support, immune boost, anti-aging (but not the main looksmax focus).
- Easy to stack, relatively cheap for oral.
Many on the forum swear by IV for faster/dramatic results, oral/sublingual for maintenance.
Downsides & Risks:
Not all studies show big results. Effects often mild, better for already lighter skin or pigmentation issues than dramatic race change. Inconclusive long-term data.
- Oral: Poor absorption (body breaks it down). Mild GI issues (bloating, cramps, loose stools).
- IV: Most risky, dangerous — kidney/liver damage, thyroid issues, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, anaphylaxis, infections if DIY. Banned/warned in some countries (e.g. Philippines FDA) for cosmetic use. No strong long-term safety data.
- Other sides: Lower zinc levels (long-term), allergic reactions, possible rebound hyperpigmentation when stopping.
- Not magic: Won't fix bad bones, needs consistent use + sun protection. Expensive for IV.
Oral/topical is safer with modest gains. IV is high risk/high reward — many call it cope or dangerous without a good clinic.
Common Stocks:
GSH + Vitamin C (best one)
GSH + NAC
GSH + MSM
Topicals: Alpha Arbutin / Kojic Acid / Niacinamide
My Recommended Schedule (Oral route and safest for most)
Phase 1 (4-8 weeks):
1000-1500mg GSH daily ( Take it as 3 doses)
1000-2000mg Vitamin C with each dose
Take on empty stomach if possible
Strict sun avoidance + SPF 50+ everyday
Phase 2 (Maintenance):
Drop to 500-1000mg GSH daily
Keep the Vit C
Continue for 2-3 months minimum
IV Route (Nuclear, only if you ready to risk it for tha biscuit):
600-1200mg IV 1-2x per week for 4-8 weeks (clinic only)
Then maintenance oral.
Always use vitamins with it for max results,
Especially Vitamin C.
Now here is all the answers about GSH questions and a guide how to use it
What is GSH and How does it work?
Glutathione is the principal intracellular thiol-based antioxidant, present in millimolar concentrations across eukaryotic cells. Its unique tripeptide structure of glutamate, cysteine and glycine underpins a thiol redox couple that detoxifies reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, contributes to xenobiotic clearance, and regulates protein thiol modifications. Glutathione is synthesised in the cytosol via consecutive enzyme-catalysed steps and distributed to subcellular compartments, where it maintains redox homeostasis through reversible conversion between its reduced (GSH) and oxidised (GSSG) forms. This balance underlies cellular survival by supporting antioxidant defence, signal transduction and regulation of cell death pathways. Perturbations of glutathione metabolism are implicated in ageing, neurodegeneration, cardiovascular disease and cancer, where impaired GSH levels contribute to oxidative stress, aberrant ferroptotic cell death and altered immune responses. Therapeutic strategies targeting glutathione synthesis, regeneration and depletion have thus emerged as promising approaches to modulate redox balance in diverse pathological contexts.
Main Goal:
Skin lightening/ whitening— Shifts melanin from dark eumelanin to lighter pheomelanin, inhibits tyrosinase. Popular for overall brighter tone, reducing hyperpigmentation, acne scars, dark spots.
- Clearing uneven skin tone, glow, anti-aging (wrinkles, elasticity).
Sometimes stacked with Vitamin C, NAC, MSM for better absorption/results.
Forms: Oral pills, sublingual, liposomal, topical creams, IV drips (most aggressive and dangerous one).
Benefits:
- Skin lightening: Based on studies (oral 250-500mg/day) show modest reduction in melanin index, especially on sun-exposed areas. Can give 1-2 shades lighter + glow in 4-12 weeks for some.
- Antioxidant glow: Fights oxidative stress, may improve skin elasticity, reduce wrinkles, UV damage.
- Clears hyperpigmentation / melasma in certain studies (topical + oral combo works better).
- General health: Liver support, immune boost, anti-aging (but not the main looksmax focus).
- Easy to stack, relatively cheap for oral.
Many on the forum swear by IV for faster/dramatic results, oral/sublingual for maintenance.
Downsides & Risks:
Not all studies show big results. Effects often mild, better for already lighter skin or pigmentation issues than dramatic race change. Inconclusive long-term data.
- Oral: Poor absorption (body breaks it down). Mild GI issues (bloating, cramps, loose stools).
- IV: Most risky, dangerous — kidney/liver damage, thyroid issues, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, anaphylaxis, infections if DIY. Banned/warned in some countries (e.g. Philippines FDA) for cosmetic use. No strong long-term safety data.
- Other sides: Lower zinc levels (long-term), allergic reactions, possible rebound hyperpigmentation when stopping.
- Not magic: Won't fix bad bones, needs consistent use + sun protection. Expensive for IV.
Oral/topical is safer with modest gains. IV is high risk/high reward — many call it cope or dangerous without a good clinic.
Common Stocks:
GSH + Vitamin C (best one)
GSH + NAC
GSH + MSM
Topicals: Alpha Arbutin / Kojic Acid / Niacinamide
My Recommended Schedule (Oral route and safest for most)
Phase 1 (4-8 weeks):
1000-1500mg GSH daily ( Take it as 3 doses)
1000-2000mg Vitamin C with each dose
Take on empty stomach if possible
Strict sun avoidance + SPF 50+ everyday
Phase 2 (Maintenance):
Drop to 500-1000mg GSH daily
Keep the Vit C
Continue for 2-3 months minimum
IV Route (Nuclear, only if you ready to risk it for tha biscuit):
600-1200mg IV 1-2x per week for 4-8 weeks (clinic only)
Then maintenance oral.
Always use vitamins with it for max results,
Especially Vitamin C.




Im whiter then you btw don't forget