Tren cough first time... that shit sucks

bikerMT

New Member
Been awhile since I logged on, no real news to report lately, cycle going great, lowered BF by a couple % so far and LBM definitely up. Did my homework before so no problems with any controllable sides (tamox, pramipexole, anastrozole all helping there.) Only thing recently is when I went to do my tren A and test prop inject tonight, the plunger was a little sticky, so took a bit of force, and injection went in faster then usual. No later than I had gotten the needle out of me that I felt like someone was stepping on my chest, coughed once and couldn't stop coughing for a couple minutes. Now I know what that shit feels like, that's the first time for me, I think I've gotten the taste in my mouth before, but never the cough. I think there's definitely something to be said for tren ace and injecting too fast leading to the cough, have read all of the supposed causes, I'm in my 7th week tren ace eod and this is the first time that shit's happened, all because of a sticky plunger and me being too stupid to just change syringes. Never again....
 
It has nothing to do with injecting too fast, some of the oil just made it's way into a vein...

If you DID notice a significant decrease in resistance than you likely were injecting directly into the vein. That's why it's always a good idea to aspirate prior to injecting.
 
I've heard using an asthma inhaler at the onset of acute tren cough will give relief. This is anecdotal by the way; I haven't tried this myself. Anyone have any experience with this?

If you don't already have access to an inhaler it's probably not worth getting one unless you get tren cough frequently or it's severe when you do.
 
I've heard using an asthma inhaler at the onset of acute tren cough will give relief. This is anecdotal by the way; I haven't tried this myself. Anyone have any experience with this?

If you don't already have access to an inhaler it's probably not worth getting one unless you get tren cough frequently or it's severe when you do.

I think its the placebo effect. An inhaler opens the bronchials allowing more air in. How would it affect a substance coming in through the blood stream? Tren cough is a bitch and once its there, ain't no stopping that train.
 
Mike has it right. No harm bro, you have the real deal which is a good thing. Tren is one of the most counterfeited aas around because of the cost of raw.
If you don't mind which lab?
 
I think its the placebo effect. An inhaler opens the bronchials allowing more air in. How would it affect a substance coming in through the blood stream? Tren cough is a bitch and once its there, ain't no stopping that train.
A beta 2 agonist could minimize the shortness of breath. I wouldn't have an issue giving an Albuterol treatment to a patient presenting with severe respiratory distress refractory to injecting oil in a blood vessel.
 
Dammnit Mike!!! I was trying to sound like I knew something!! Then you came back with your big fancy words and now I have a headache. :rolleyes:
 
I know I've seen people who said that on entry maybe a blood vessel got nicked, and injecting quicker forced some of the tren in there. That's the theory I'm starting to like because I always aspirate, last night, actually aspirated twice cause my hand was moving around trying to get the plunger to go. Good news is that I was recovering from a chest cold, and all that coughing really cleared me up for this morning...
Believe it or not, this was from MLG, ordered from them before I saw all of the negative reviews. I guess I got lucky, who knows if it is properly dosed, but I am sweating like a pig at night, the cough, and the strength increase.
 
I think its the placebo effect. An inhaler opens the bronchials allowing more air in. How would it affect a substance coming in through the blood stream? Tren cough is a bitch and once its there, ain't no stopping that train.

It's not just having the substance in the bloodstream; it's what effect having a sudden spike of that substance in the bloodstream will have on the body. Finding that out will give options to treat the symptoms of having that substance in the bloodstream.

Here's my understanding of it, but I'm no doctor so take this as you will. Tren causes rises in prostaglandins. Prostagandins cause a rise in leukotrienes, which are potent constrictors of the bronchial airways and a major contributing factor of asthma. The rise in leukotrienes causes inflammation in the lungs. This is the cause of endurance issues on tren that many people complain of.

All of that still doesn't really explain acute tren cough, only the ongoing respiratory issues that come along with tren and trying to do cardio. It is a contributing factor in acute tren cough though.

Another anecdotal remedy I've seen pasted around several boards by some experienced users is the use of Leukotriene Receptor Antagonists to combat trens ongoing respiratory downsides. It also reduces the severity of tren cough, although doesn't mitigate it completely. This is more of an preemptive thing though as opposed to an inhaler, which would be kept on hand during injections.

I take all this to mean that a bronchodilator could be helpful in the event of tren cough. But again, I could probably stand to do a bit more research on this.
 
It's not just having the substance in the bloodstream; it's what effect having a sudden spike of that substance in the bloodstream will have on the body. Finding that out will give options to treat the symptoms of having that substance in the bloodstream.

Here's my understanding of it, but I'm no doctor so take this as you will. Tren causes rises in prostaglandins. Prostagandins cause a rise in leukotrienes, which are potent constrictors of the bronchial airways and a major contributing factor of asthma. The rise in leukotrienes causes inflammation in the lungs. This is the cause of endurance issues on tren that many people complain of.

All of that still doesn't really explain acute tren cough, only the ongoing respiratory issues that come along with tren and trying to do cardio. It is a contributing factor in acute tren cough though.

Another anecdotal remedy I've seen pasted around several boards by some experienced users is the use of Leukotriene Receptor Antagonists to combat trens ongoing respiratory downsides. It also reduces the severity of tren cough, although doesn't mitigate it completely. This is more of an preemptive thing though as opposed to an inhaler, which would be kept on hand during injections.

I take all this to mean that a bronchodilator could be helpful in the event of tren cough. But again, I could probably stand to do a bit more research on this.

Great reply Fisty. Makes sense though.
 
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