Aspirine hoort gewoon in een eca stack.
Zowiezo is aspirine goed om te nemen.Er zijn genoeg artsen die aspirine voorschrijven.
Het zou goed werken (werkt) tegen trombose,doorbloeding van de spieren voornamelijk het hart.
Zou niet snel weten waarom aspirine slecht zou zijn,mits natuurlijk normaal gedoseert.
Op wikkipedia staat zelf bij ECA dat er 350 mg genomen moet worden,dit is idd beetje erg heftig.
Dit goedje lijkt mij iig beter dan clenbuterol.
Maar dit is natuurlijk mijn mening,en iig is er nu iets aanwezig waardoor je zelf niet hoef te rotzooien met verpulveren,en samenstellen
Aspirine toevoeging heeft te maken met het in het systeem houden van de ephedrine.Aspirine blokt de opname in de urine zodat de ephi in je systeem blijft.
Hieronder hoe het werkt.
Maar goed het blijft een goedje wat goed werkt,MAAR OOK GEVAARLIJK KAN ZIJN. Dit onderken ik niet.
Ephedrine comes from a plant called ephedra, a perennial shrub with about 40 different species that grow in regions of Asia, Europe, North America and South America. Many of the Asian and European varieties contain active constituents called ephedrine alkaloids (EAs). Ephedrine is the major EA. Chinese ephedra plants are known as mahuang, meaning "yellow astringent." (Ephedrine also occurs in the heartleaf plant Sida cordifolia.) In his newsletter "The Dietary Supplement," Paul Thomas, EdD, RD, notes that the Chinese have used mahuang for more than 5,000 years to treat conditions including asthma, colds, fever and even malaria.
Ephedrine products, sometimes called thermogenics, are sold in pill, drink and even bar form. They're often combined with caffeine and/or aspirin, as well as a variety of other herbs touted to help burn fat.
Caffeine is often added or "stacked" to ephedrine-based products, as it enhances and prolongs ephedrine's effects; the herb guarana is also a source of caffeine. "Studies suggest that ephedra works better with caffeine [up to 240 mg/day] for weight loss," says Thomas. If you do take a product stacked with ephedrine and caffeine, be especially cognizant of your caffeine intake at other times of the day. "Those consuming large quantities of [caffeinated] coffee, tea and soft drinks are at greater risk of adverse effects," notes Cliff Morris, MD, medical director of cardiac rehabilitation at the John Randolph Medical Center in Hopewell, Virginia. Especially if you consume ephedrine, limit your caffeine intake to 300 mg/day; 6 ounces of regular brewed coffee contains 103 mg caffeine. Additionally, stay well hydrated, as caffeine has a diuretic effect. We don't recommend stacking the two if you're sensitive to ephedrine or you're a heavy caffeine user.
You might also find aspirin, caffcine and ephedrine (ECA) in what's called an ECA stack. "[Aspirin] is often added to fat-burner products because it appears to reduce urinary excretion of ephedrine, thus keeping it in the blood longer and prolonging ephedrine's stimulating effects," explains Sheri Barke, MPH, PD, a nutritionist at the UCLA Arthur Ashe Student Health and Wellness Center Salicin, a compound similar to aspirin, is often used in place of aspirin in an ephedrine stack "Because salicin can prolong ephedtine's stimulating effects, it increases ephedra's potential risks," Thomas explains.
how it works
Heard of the "fight or flight" reaction? In response to a stressful situation, your sympathetic nervous system gears up to either go to battle or escape a situation immediately. Heart rate and blood pressure increase to prepare the body for action. Ephedrine mimics the effects of epinephrine and norepinephtine, the two naturally occurring chemicals in the body primarily responsible for the fight or flight syndrome. When you take ephedrine, then, you're basically stimulating your sympathetic nervous system, causing:
* a faster heartbeat, increased force of heart contraction and increased blood flow
* increased blood pressure
* increased thermogenesis (the body's heat production, generated by calorie-burning)
* increased blood flow to the brain