Anyone Have Any Ephedrine Left?

If anyone has any Ephedrine pills left such as the old Nitro2Go, would you be willing to sell them?
Does anyone know of anything that is as effective as ephedrine or where I might be able to get some real ephedrine, not HCL?
Thank You.
 
o come on man!

you know the risks, buy the book the warrior diet and u'll lose weight and you'll actually be more than just an attracitve body with a heart ready to POP!
 
photo312 said:
People got really carried away with the risks of ephedrine.

I used to be on this stack: Ephedrine, Caffeine and Aspirine.

It increased the body temperature therefore increased the need to burn more calories. I got so chizled I looked like a skeleton with pure muscles.

Side effect was: loss of apetite - I ate 3 times a day and major headaches once you get off the stack.

You can search the web for: ephedrine,aspirine,caffeine stack and I am sure you will hear about it. I ordered ephedrine from on line and bought the baby aspirine and caffeine pills at a drug store.

Not the kind of trainer i would hire.
 
Not the kind of trainer i would hire.
Oh come now, so judgemental. All trainers start off as trainees themselves, and for better or worse, many of them have tried different things that they wouldn't recommend to their clients. I'm not saying the ECA stack is such a thing, but you shouldn't hold what a trainer did to themselves against them - only what they're subjecting their clients to.

When I first started training, my trainer started talking to me about supplementation. In my naivety, I thought "WARNING! STEROIDS! WARNING!" when what he wanted me to start taking were actually perfectly safe, perfectly healthy natural supplementation. He was in fact, very anti-steroidal use (though in his younger days, he admitted to having tried them).

As far as the ECA stack goes, I don't feel it's something to get horrified about, newf. :)
 
I've used xendrine, thermo pro and a few others a few years ago. There's a reason it illegal don't you think? Anyway, just this guy is quick to say he's a pro and quite frankly is trying to lure people to his forums. Which is ok to me but don't try to tell people they shouldn't workout at home. That's stupid.
 
Gonna agree with you, NEWF. As a trainer for 14+ years, I never have nor never will suggest ANY supplements with the exception of extra protein, which can be acheived through diet. If somthing happened to that client, some kind of reaction, I certainly wouldnt want that on my conscience! I heard of a trainer in Virginia who suggested ephedrine to their client. Client died! NICE JOB!
There have been proven side effects of ephedrine. I teach a National personal trianing certification course, and I make sure I tell them never to suggest any supplements to anyone!
Although, in Zegee's defense, he simply stated what HE has taken!
Wes
 
newf said:
I've used xendrine, thermo pro and a few others a few years ago. There's a reason it illegal don't you think? Anyway, just this guy is quick to say he's a pro and quite frankly is trying to lure people to his forums. Which is ok to me but don't try to tell people they shouldn't workout at home. That's stupid.
Well, for starters, I believe photo312 is a trainer on Zegee.com, not an actual administrator of the site. Secondly, as I said before, ephedrine wasn't made illegal, EPHEDRA was. Ephedra is the herbal form of ephedrine, and ephedrine are the saponins found in the herbal form. The point was that it wasn't to be sold as a weight loss supplement, but had numerous other applications.

Ever hear of Sudafed? That's ephedrine.

There have been proven side effects of ephedrine. I teach a National personal trianing certification course, and I make sure I tell them never to suggest any supplements to anyone!
Aspirin kills more people each year than ephedra ever did, but you don't recommend people stop taking that for headaches do you? The fact of the matter is that supplementation (and I'm not just talking about weight loss or performance supplementation here) is a different side of the fence than allopathic medicine is in the U.S. today.

Right now in the U.S. we have a medical industry in which a lot of money is changing hands, but there are still very basic health needs that aren't being addressed for the majority of the populace. Even supposedly well-tested drugs (Vioxx, Celebrex, Betaseron, etc.) are found later to be very detrimental, even life threatening to their patients - whereas the majority of supplements (barring steroids, of course) are perfectly safe when used as directed - except in cases of say, allergic reactions.

The naturopathic/preventative approach of supplementation is to prevent disease BEFORE it happens - whereas allopathic medicine, the predominant system in the U.S. - mainly seeks to cure diseases once they come up. Fighting disease rather than preventing it.

As for condition based supplementation - e.g. weight loss, sports nutrition, performance enhancers, weight gainers, etc - when used as directed (for by definition anything is bad for you when you take too much) are very safe.

Many of the ephedra/ine deaths (under 155 related deaths in the U.S. ever) were later proven to be caused primarily by other conditions (most notably dehydration). Those who suffered heart related conditions either had a history of high blood pressure (which the labelling on ANY stimulant clearly warns of) or were taking well over the recommended dosage. It's also worth noting that Mua Huang (the native name of the ephedra herb) has been in circulation for thousands of years - but it wasn't until an athlete who died of dehydration was found to have been taking ephedra did they seek to ban it.

However, I can understand how as a trainer you may be more reluctant to suggest something that has been linked to any deaths whatsoever as, like you said, you wouldn't want that hanging over your head. To shut out all supplementation? I consider that very naive, especially for someone who is making health recommendations for others.
 
Fil,
A well thought out post, once again!
Here are my thoughts:
some trainers, sadly, will overlook the fact that there is a history of HBP. They may not realize the correlation between the HBP and the effects of Ephedrine raising the HR. Only that, it works for someone they know, or it looks good in the commercial.
Personally, I dont want to play around with anything that raises the HR artificially, simply for the purpose of fat loss.
I have plenty of collegues who disagree, and will sugest supplements to others.
I am a big believer in creatine, and I have read nothing about significant side effects of it. In fact, as I'm sure you know, all of the research is showing that creatine is pretty much a "no brainer" when it comes to resistance training. I have taken it, I have taken ephedra, ZMA, Glutamine, Aminos, protein supplementation. I still dont feel comfortable recommending it to someone. Perhaps it is because it is not my area of specialty. And, chances are, if they asked me my opinion, and I told them to ask their doctor, how many doctors do you think would say, "yeah, go ahead and take it"?
 
Very understandable in that case. Creatine is great stuff and yes, very safe. Sometimes I neglect the fact that I'm very well informed about nutrition and supplementation, and you're absolutely right that unless you know why/how something works and whether or not someone should take it, you should be wary of making any recommendations -- just as how I wouldn't feel comfortable prescribing a workout regime to a 72 year old lady. I just don't have the experience to tell her something that will benefit her without harming her.

(Though, admittedly, I am working on my NSCA CPT Cert at the moment. Maybe it's not so far off!)
 
Fil,
Let me know if I can be of any help with the exam, although I didnt take that one.
Are you a member of NSCA? If so, check out the website and the forums there. There are always people asking for advice on taking those exams. If youre not a member yet, let me know and I'll see if I can find peoples suggestions, copy 'em and email them to you.
Let me know!
Wes
 
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