Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - This Is Everything You Need to Know About Ephedrine
Episode Date: October 20, 2017No matter how hard you train, how dialed in your diet is, or how smartly you supplement, losing weight is a pain in the ass. The leaner you get, the more you have to deal with hunger and cravings, the... harder your workouts become, and the less you have to eat to keep the needle moving. That’s why many people turn to drugs like ephedrine for help, which has a special place in the hearts of bodybuilders everywhere. If you’ve spent any amount of time in the gym, you’ve undoubtedly heard that it’s as close to a weight loss “magic bullet” as you can ask for. Ephedrine purportedly kills your appetite while also dramatically increasing your metabolic rate and fat burning, which means you’ll not only lose fat faster but will also have an easier time of sticking to your meal plans, as well. Even better, we’re told, ephedrine is just as safe as caffeine but, unlike the world’s most popular drug, gets more effective the longer you use it. Poke around online, though, and you’ll find the opposition party, who claim that ephedrine is middling at best as a fat burner and not nearly as safe as many people think. The more strident critics even claim that it can significantly raise the risk of anxiety attack, heart attack, and stroke. And so, like with many things related to building muscle, losing fat, and getting healthy, you’re stuck in the middle, wondering whom to believe. How effective is ephedrine, really? How serious are the side effects and health risks? And if it’s safe, how should it be dosed and how long should you take it for? Well, you’re going to get answers to all of those questions and more in this episode. You’re going to learn exactly how ephedrine works, how good of a “fat burner” it really is, what the literature has to say about its safety, and more. Let’s get to it. 3:34 - What is Ephedrine and how does it work? 9:28 - Is Ephedrine safe? 10:07 - Why is Ephedrine labeled dangerous? 12:41 - How much Ephedrine should I take? 14:56 - Is Ephedrine legal? 15:46 - Is there another product similar to Ephedrine? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
No matter how hard you train or how dialed in your diet is or how smartly you supplement,
losing weight is a pain in the ass, let's face it. The leaner you get, the more you have to
deal with hunger and cravings, the harder your workouts become, and the less and less you get to eat if you want to keep the
needle moving. And that's why many people turn to drugs like ephedrine for help, which has a
particularly special place in the hearts of many bodybuilders. If you spent any time in the gym,
you have probably heard of the ECA stack,
ephedrine, caffeine, aspirin stack, and you've probably heard that that is about as close to
a weight loss magic bullet as you can ask for. If you are to believe the hype, then ephedrine
can kill your appetite while also dramatically increasing your metabolic rate and fat burning,
which means that you're not only going to lose fat faster, but you'll also have an easier time of sticking to your diet as well.
Even better, people say ephedrine is just as safe as caffeine, but unlike the world's most popular
drug, gets even more effective the longer that you use it. If you poke around online though,
you will find the opposition party. You
will find people who claim that ephedrine is middling at best as a fat burner and not nearly
as safe as many people think. Some people even say that it can significantly raise your risk of
anxiety attack, heart attack, and even stroke. And so as it goes with many things related to building muscle,
losing fat, and getting healthy, you're stuck in the middle wondering whom to believe. How
effective is ephedrine really? How serious are the side effects and health risks? And if it is
indeed safe, how should it be dosed and how long should you take it for? Well, you are going to
get answers to all of those questions
and a bit more in this podcast. By the end of the podcast, you're going to know exactly how
ephedrine works in your body. You're going to know how good of a fat burner it really is,
and also what the scientific literature has to say about its safety and much more.
This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the bills, but I'm not big on
promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead, I'm just going to quickly
tell you about something of mine, specifically my high quality sports multivitamin Triumph.
Now Triumph was designed for athletes and physically active people who want to optimize their health and fight off stress,
fatigue, and overtraining. It contains 21 vitamins and minerals, as well as 14 additional ingredients
that improve overall health and wellbeing, enhance physical and mental performance,
and help protect against disease. All that is why Triumph has over 500 reviews on Amazon with a four and a half star
average and another 180 plus on my website with a five star average. So if you want to plug any
nutritional holes in your diet, improve your mood and mental and physical performance and boost your
resistance to stress, sickness, and disease, then you want to head over to www.legionathletics.com and pick up a bottle of Triumph today. And just to show how much I
appreciate my podcast peeps, use the coupon code podcast to check out and you will save
10% on your entire order. All right, so let's start this episode at the top. What is ephedrine and
how does it work? Well, ephedrine is a stimulant and it increases your metabolic rate and thus it
can increase fat loss. In short, it increases the amount of energy that your body burns and a lot
of that comes from fat. The molecule itself is extracted and refined from
a shrub that grows in China called Ephedra sinica, which is why you will also sometimes
see it referred to as Ephedra. This plant has been popular in traditional Chinese medicine
for a long time because it makes breathing easier by relaxing the muscles around your airways.
So it can be used to treat various
conditions like the common cold, coughing, and the flu. Here in the West though, ephedrine is found
in asthma medications for the same reason, because it makes breathing easier. Now, how does that
relate to your metabolism and to fat burning, you're wondering? Well, basically ephedrine works
by binding to receptors in your cells that
respond to chemicals called catecholamines, which include adrenaline, noradrenaline, and dopamine.
And when any of these molecules attach to cells, they trigger your body's fight or flight response,
which increases heart rate, decreases hunger, and accelerates fat and glycogen burning. Ephedrine also helps reduce fat
stores that are naturally more resistant to mobilization than others. Stubborn fat cells,
if you're not familiar with that, it is a thing. And it does this by increasing the activity in a
cellular receptor known as a beta receptor, which triggers the release of energy stored in the fat cell. And if you want
to know more about that in particular, head over to legionathletics.com and search for stubborn fat,
and you will find an in-depth article that I wrote on it. So all that being what it is,
obviously then most people take ephedrine to benefit their body composition. They take it
to increase their metabolic rate, to lose fat faster, and to
blunt their appetites. There's also evidence that ephedrine can increase strength, endurance,
and power, which isn't exactly surprising because it is a stimulant, and that it may be able to help
spare muscle mass while dieting as well. The latter effect though isn't clearly understood
or established. It may just have inherent muscle
sparing properties, or this phenomenon may simply be a by-product of its potential performance
enhancing properties. Because if you can maintain a high training intensity while you're dieting,
you're going to be less likely to lose muscle. Either way, what we know is that people that
take ephedrine while cutting seem to hold on to a bit more muscle than those who don't.
Now, unlike many fat burner supplements on the market, the science is very clear with
ephedrine.
It most definitely can help you lose fat and, of course, weight faster.
Research shows that it reliably and significantly increases fat burning, and it also works synergistically
with caffeine,
which can also accelerate your weight loss. So in other words, when you combine caffeine with
ephedrine, you can lose weight faster than if you took them separately. And in terms of how much
faster, one study found that the EC stack, the ephedrine caffeine stack, can increase your
metabolic rate by about 5%, which would translate to about an additional
one third of a pound of fat loss per week for the average person. That's not game changing,
of course, but it is the equivalent energy expenditure of about 30 minutes of vigorous
walking per day, which isn't bad for a couple pills. Ephedrine is also a rather unique fat burner in that it gets more
effective over time. Unlike caffeine, for example, which loses its fat burning mojo the longer you
use it, studies show that ephedrine's effects are actually amplified by continued use because
it appears to increase your body's sensitivity to catecholamines, to the adrenaline, noradrenaline,
and dopamine that is
produced. And this is particularly beneficial when you're cutting because the longer you remain in a
caloric deficit, the less energy your body burns both at rest and during exercise. And that's one
of the primary reasons why people just inexplicably stop losing weight after dieting for some time.
They don't realize that they're not burning nearly as much energy through their activity and just their natural metabolic rate
as when they started. Ephedrine then helps compensate for this through its compounding
metabolic effects. Yet another major weight loss benefit of ephedrine that has been
verified by scientific research is indeed appetite suppression. It's not uncommon for people who take ephedrine for the first time to feel satiated on just a few hundred calories per
day, which I definitely don't recommend, but it does illustrate how powerfully it can suppress
your hunger. Now we know that these effects do diminish over time, but most people report a
noticeable reduction in overall hunger and cravings for as long as they take ephedrine, many months in some cases.
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Life, and Facebook at Muscle for Life Fitness. So far, so good, right? Ephedrine is sounding
pretty amazing, but the next question is safety. Is it safe? And like every stimulant,
ephedrine definitely has side effects. The common ones include elevated heart rate and blood
pressure, nausea, insomnia, dizziness, jitters, hand tremors, the stuff that you would expect
from a stimulant. And while that may sound pretty ominous to you, the story is more or less the
same for other stimulants like caffeine and yohimbine. And research does show that these
reactions do tend to subside after the first
week or so of taking ephedrine. Why then is it often labeled as dangerous and tarred with the
same brush as much harsher drugs like clenbuterol and DNP? And there are a couple reasons for this.
The first reason is taking ephedrine does come with risks. The
risks may not be as serious as some people would have you believe, but the reality is ephedrine is
a drug and every drug comes with some sort of risk. Some people just don't respond well to
ephedrine and experience very serious side effects. And that's why as of 2004, the FDA had recorded over 18,000 complaints from ephedrine users.
Now that said, most of these cases involved preexisting health conditions and also super
dosing it, taking way too much, and then also combining it with other recreational and
pharmaceutical drugs like alcohol, cold medicines, and even ecstasy. Definitely do not recommend any of that.
So as you can imagine, some pretty nasty things happen to people who are taking ephedrine.
Some people died, including a 23-year-old baseball player named Steve Belcher. And in 2004,
the FDA said enough and just banned its use in all supplements. This then gave rise to unfounded fears about its general safety,
which is kind of ironic because plenty of people have died from caffeine overdose as well,
but millions of us use and some of us abuse caffeine every day without even giving it a
second thought, but would consider ephedrine far too risky or otherwise bad, mainly because it's found in
asthma medications and not allowed in supplements. So the bottom line here is this. Studies show
that when it's taken responsibly, ephedrine is generally safe and without serious side effects.
If it is contraindicated due to preexisting health conditions though, or if the dosing is too high,
or if it's combined with other drugs like
alcohol, large amounts of nicotine or MDMA, it can be dangerous or even deadly. You should also
know that most of the research that has been done on ephedrine only lasted a few weeks or a few
months. So we don't know if things change for the worse when it's used for longer period.
Now, of course, most cuts don't go
for more than two or three months or shouldn't go for more than two or three months unless you have
a lot of fat to lose. And if that's you, or if your cut is going to go for a while and you want
to use ephedrine, you can always cycle on and off it to minimize the likelihood of experiencing any
complications. Speaking of taking ephedrine, the next question,
of course, then is if you're going to take it, how much should you take? And the answer is the
most common dosing protocol that you will find for weight loss in the scientific literature is
three servings of 20 to 25 milligrams of ephedrine per day. And those are usually given in the
morning, around noon, and then in the early afternoon.
Your standard EC stack in bodybuilding circles combines each of those servings with about 200
milligrams of caffeine, which is fairly high. I might add that's probably too high for regular
long-term consumption. I personally would probably cut that in half. Some people also include
aspirin as well to make the
ECA stack because there's some evidence that suggests that it might further increase fat
burning in obese people, but research has demonstrated that it doesn't appear to do the
same thing in leaner people. There are also some safety concerns to take into account here because
taking significant amounts of aspirin over longer periods of time is probably not a
good idea. So I'm going to recommend that you just leave the aspirin out. Now I mentioned cycling
ephedrine if you're going to be cutting for a long time, but many people also wonder if you should
cycle it, even if you are cutting for shorter periods of time. And the reason for this is most
stimulants do become less effective over time because your body simply builds a tolerance to
them, which then requires that you take more and more to continue feeling their effects.
Clinbuterol, for example, becomes significantly less effective after around four to six weeks of
continued use. And that's why many of these types of stimulants are cycled, especially when you're
trying to lose fat, because it allows your body to reset its sensitivity and
responsiveness to them. As you now know, though, ephedrine is different. It's the opposite.
Actually, it becomes more effective the longer you use it. So it doesn't need to be cycled to
maintain its potency. That said, again, I will say that we can't be sure as to the long-term
side effects of ephedrine use. So if you want to play it as safely as possible, then I would recommend you take a week off every four to six weeks or so. And for bonus points,
if you are also taking caffeine with your ephedrine, come off that as well, because
it will help maintain its efficacy as a fat burner. Another point worth touching on here
is the legality because many people wonder if it's legal or not. As you know, it's not allowed
to be included in supplements. And that's why the only legal ephedrine containing products that you
can buy, at least here in the US, are asthma, allergy, and cold medications like bronchade
and primatine. There are also limits as to how much of these drugs you can buy at any one time
because it's possible to manufacture methamphetamine from large amounts of ephedrine and other similar drugs. Ephedrine is also banned
by most sports organizations, including the NCAA, MLB, NFL, and PGA, as well as the International
Olympic Committee and World Anti-Doping Agency, because as I mentioned earlier, it may slightly enhance athletic
performance. Now, as useful as ephedrine is, I think you should consider taking something else
instead, which is called sinephrine. Sinephrine is a natural compound extracted from the bitter
orange fruit that's chemically similar to ephedrine and produces the same type of effects in the body,
but it's not a drug. One study found that a single 50 milligram dose of synephrine increased
basal metabolic rate by about 65 calories over the next 75 minutes. And then when it was combined
with two other natural molecules, which are called naringin and hesperidin, that number jumped to about 180 calories.
Now, that may not seem like that much, but it's actually pretty comparable to what is seen with
ephedrine. It's about the same amount of energy that you burn during 20-ish minutes of jogging.
And if you were to do that every day, if you were to take sinephrine, naringin, and hesperidin in the right amounts
every day, that would add up to about 1300 additional calories burned every week,
which is about an additional one third or so of a pound of fat loss per week. Because sinephrine
is chemically similar to ephedrine, it can also help you lose stubborn fat faster in the same way.
it can also help you lose stubborn fat faster in the same way. It inhibits a cellular mechanism that blunts fat burning. It also increases the thermic effect of food, which is the amount of
energy it costs to digest and process the food that you eat. And it also can reduce your appetite
as well. Another reason to choose Sinephrin over Ephedrine, and I think the most compelling reason
is research shows that it's extremely safe to take.
Multiple studies have found that Senefrin does not increase blood pressure or heart rate like
ephedrine. And that's why it's generally considered one of the safest stimulatory
weight loss supplements that you can take. So the bottom line is if you want to lose fat
faster without taking a harsher stimulant like ephedrine, then I highly recommend sinephrine.
And I also highly recommend combining it with naringin and hesperidin and shameless plug. If I
may, you can find all three of those in the right dosages among some other goodies in my 100%
natural fat burner Phoenix, which you can learn more about at legionathletics.com slash phoenix if you are interested. So the bottom line
on ephedrine is this. It's a stimulant. It can help you lose fat faster by increasing your metabolic
rate and blunting your appetite. There's evidence that it may also improve exercise performance,
and it does appear to help preserve lean mass while dieting as well, although those effects
are not clearly understood or established.
It's also pretty unique in that it becomes more potent over time, whereas other stimulants tend
to drop off with continued use. And while ephedrine is generally safe and it's generally
well-tolerated when it's used responsibly, common side effects do include elevated heart rate and
blood pressure as well as jitters, but these things do tend to
dissipate after the first week or so for most people. Where ephedrine gets dangerous is if you
take too much of it or if you combine it with other drugs like alcohol and nicotine, or if you
have preexisting health conditions that contraindicate its use. So if you want to speed up
your fat loss and you aren't afraid of
the potential side effects, or you just want to see how you respond, then including ephedrine in
your regimen can definitely make sense. If you're like me though, and you prefer to stick to natural
supplements whenever possible, then you should check out its natural counterpart, sinephrine,
which can also help you burn more calories and burn more stubborn fat and feel less hungry without having
to worry about the potential downsides or long-term health risks that may be associated with ephedrine.
Hey there, it is Mike again. I hope you enjoyed this episode and found it interesting and helpful.
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Thanks again for listening to this episode. And I hope to hear from you soon. And lastly,
this episode is brought to you by me. Seriously, though, I'm not big on promoting stuff that I
don't personally use and believe in. So instead instead I'm going to just quickly tell you about something of mine, specifically my high quality
sports multivitamin Triumph. Now Triumph was designed for athletes and physically active
people who want to optimize their health and fight off stress, fatigue, and overtraining.
It contains 21 vitamins and minerals, as well as
14 additional ingredients that improve overall health and wellbeing, enhance physical and mental
performance, and help protect against disease. All that is why Triumph has over 500 reviews on
Amazon with a four and a half star average and another 180 plus on my website with a five star
average. So if you want to plug any nutritional holes in your diet, improve your mood and mental
and physical performance and boost your resistance to stress, sickness, and disease, then you want to
head over to www.legionathletics.com and pick up a bottle of triumph today.
And just to show how much I appreciate my podcast peeps,
use the coupon code podcast to check out and you will save 10% on your entire
order.