
Originally Posted by
waltr64
It is my understanding that Tren is the steroid that has the most affect on the heart and can enlarge it and make it stronger, causing higher BP.
I am doing a test of a low dose of Tren for a few weeks to see if it will help with my weak heart. I can't do cardio anymore but do lift what I can. It is my hope that the tren will help strengthen my heart and even grow it a little. I have low blood pressure and so far the Tren has not increased it. Got about 3 more weeks left on Tren then I go back to my cardiologist to see if there has been any change. My heart has been getting weaker every year over the last 5 years until last year when I started HGH which seemed to keep it from getting worse but did not make it better. Currently I am around 30 % function, at 25% I can get on the list for a transplant (I am trying to avoid that). With that said from what I understand if you have High Blood Pressure or risk of Heart Attack you would want to say far away from Tren.
In the perfect world you would have a heart cath (which I did) that shows all clear before starting Tren if you are worried about your heart.
Also, from what I understand the younger you are the better your body can handle the Tren. Good luck.
Weird, I was told 15% was the threshold to be worked up for consideration as a recipient for a heart transplant. My LV ejection fraction was sub-12%.
There are much better options for treatment than trenbolone. A biventricular pacemaker, carvedilol therapy, and cardiac rehab eventually got me up to an ejection fraction in the low 30% range. With a lot of hard work I was back in the 40% range, which most cardiologists will be comfortable with.
Honestly, if your cardiologist is a part of your trenbolone therapy, I would find another cardiologist.
FYI, a larger heart isn't necessarily a good thing, particularly if the muscle tissue itself is weak and floppy. Conversely, an enlarged heart isn't necessarily a bad thing if the cardiac muscle itself is healthy and resilient enough to contract properly instead of basically quivering and pumping inefficiently.
Edit,: You didn't mention a stress echocardiogram. How did they determine your heart function was functioning at the level that it is?
Last edited by almostgone; 10-28-2018 at 01:41 PM.
There are 3 loves in my life: my wife, my English mastiffs, and my weightlifting....Man, my wife gets really pissed when I get the 3 confused...
A minimum of 100 posts and 45 days membership required for source checks. Source checks are performed at my discretion.