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  1. #1
    joevette's Avatar
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    Tren and liver toxicity

    Can someone tell me if Tren is liver toxic. It's not c17 alkalated(sp?) so I wouldn't think it would be any tougher on the liver than any other injectable, but a lot of people claim that it is liver toxic. Does anyone have any definite information, not just yes or no answers please.

  2. #2
    Jackman's Avatar
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    i thought it was just bad for you kidneys i may be wrong

  3. #3
    joevette's Avatar
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    Yes, I've heard the kidney thing too, does anyone have info on tren and kidney toxicity?

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  5. #5
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    Answer: Trenbolone acetate preperations are toxic to both liver and kidney tissue. The extent is a matter of period of administration for the most part. The reasons are strange but true.

    At one time there were the many black-market preperations of Finaplix , FinaJect and others. Most of these contained simple ground Finaplex-H implants...as most are painfully aware. With the process (if you can refer to a caveman approach as a process. The idea of "I have a rock and can make my own AAS" is not a good one) came many foreign non-kidney-friendly materials, some of which were non-soluable. The use of Fina-kits eleminated some of the material concerns due to the use of benzyl alcohol as a solvent to seperate the binders from the AAS in Finaplex-H implants. But there is another concern. The EOD or ED administration of trenbolone acetate preperations also means an accumulation of benzyl alcohol (which is quite high in these kits). Personally I felt that in itself this would not be a huge concern. Unfortunately athlete liver and kidney stress markers consistantly showed in those who utilized the drug. (A little research to discuss)

    TR-343
    Toxicology and Carcinogenesis Studies of Benzyl Alcohol (CAS No. 100-51-6) in F344/N Rats and B6C3F1 Mice (Gavage Studies)
    Chemical Formula: C7H8O - 3D Structure*

    Toxicology and carcinogenesis studies of technical-grade benzyl alcohol (99% pure), a textile dye additive, solvent, and food flavoring agent, were conducted by administering the chemical by gavage in corn oil vehicle to groups of F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice of each sex for 16 days, 13 weeks, or 2 years.

    Short-Term Studies:
    In 16-day studies, all five male and five female rats and mice dosed with 2,000 mg/kg benzyl alcohol died. Two of five male and 3/5 female rats and 1/5 male and 2/5 female mice dosed with 1,000 mg/kg died. Rats and mice of each sex in the two highest dose groups were lethargic after dosing. Other toxic responses to benzyl alcohol in these dose groups included blood around the mouth and nose, subcutaneous hemorrhages, and blood in the urinary and gastrointestinal tracts of rats and blood in the urinary bladder of mice. Animals administered lower doses of benzyl alcohol (125, 250, or 500 mg/kg) had no compound-related histologic lesions.

    Doses selected for the 13-week studies were 0, 50, 100, 200, 400, and 800 mg/kg for rats and mice. Eight of 10 male rats dosed with 800 mg/kg died during weeks 7 and 8; four of these deaths were described as gavage related. Rats dosed with 800 mg/kg exhibited clinical signs indicative of neurotoxicity including staggering, respiratory difficulty, and lethargy. Hemorrhages occurred around the mouth and nose, and there were histologic lesions in the brain, thymus, skeletal muscle, and kidney.

    In truth I now feel that it is the accumulative benzyl alcohol that had altered the liver and kidney markers disfavorably far more so than the trenbolone itself. One must remember that the amount of benzyl alcohol in 1ml of most kit preperations is several times higher than an entire 10ml vial of testosterone enanthate .

  6. #6
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    Thanks but a couple of things:
    1. I'm using straight tren ace powder, so there's no binders to hurt the kidneys.

    2. The discussion of BA would obviously go for any injectable AAS. My tren ace is made with 1-1.5% BA, so it's considerably less than kits.

    3. The study seems rediculous compared to the amount of BA you would inject during ed injections for 10 weeks. I mean 1000 mg/kg, that's not even within the realm of possibility for AAS use.

    4. So basically, this really doesn't have anything to do with tren. I always hear people saying that tren is hard on the liver, but I've yet to hear anyone say Test prop is hard on the liver. The same BA and injection schedule would be used for both.

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