DMAA / OxyElitePro - The Good, the Bad and the Downright Ugly - More Powerful (+180% Perf.) Than You'd Think, but ...
DMAA / OxyElitePro - The Good, the Bad and the Downright Ugly - More Powerful (+180% Perf.) Than You'd Think, but ...
DMAA / OxyElitePro - The Good, the Bad and the Downright Ugly - More Powerful (+180% Perf.) Than You'd Think, but ...
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Back in the day, when the original Oxy-ELITE Pro was pulled from the market, people paid crazy amounts of money for the bottles that were left on Ebay - a big mistake! Not because it would fry your liver, but rather because it's 'stim' effects will - just as those of other DMAA products - turn against you, w/ chronic use. |
It's those people I want to advice: Even if you ascribe the liver damage as the result of stupid overdosing and acknowledge that other products appear to be far worse (Garc�a-Cort�s. 2016 | FFT), don't waste your money on DMAA products, in general, and the original OxyElitePro (OEP), in particular. And here's why...
Unlike the average fat burner, OxyELITE was indeed more than just caffeine:
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Figure 1: Photo of the original OxyELITE Pro bottle and supplement facts label (Google Image Search). |
- The Good: OEP simply works -- If you are one of the previously referred to users of the product, you will probably remember your first training "on OEP". How would you describe it? Probably similar to the rodents in Zovico's study, who easily ran 2.6x and 2.8-fold further with the medium, respectively, the high dose of OPE in their blood.
"[n]o effect was found in other analyses such as spontaneous physical activity, body weight, food and water intake, hepatic toxicity, cardiac oxidative stress and mitochondrial NA amount" (Zovico. 2016),
... you will now probably (and rightly so) ask yourselves: "So, what's 'the Bad', then, if it's not liver or heart damage as they both have been reported allegedly as a consequence of the (ab-)use of both, OxyElitePro and DMAA based products, in general?" - The Bad: No liver damage, but potentially impaired adaptation to training -- Ok, part of the previously discussed "good news" was that there was no measurable - or, I should say - no sign. changes in AST, ALT and GGT (liver health) and even small beneficial effects on TBARs, i.e. lipid oxidation in the group of rodents that received the medium dose of the supplement (see MDA levels in Figure 3).
On the other hand, the scientists also found a significant, albeit likewise dose-dependent decrease in PGC-1A in the high dose group (the high dose group also saw non-significant decreases in food intake and body weight). With the latter being an important regulator of (exercise-induced) mitochondrial biogenesis, one may speculate that at least part of the exercise-induced adaptational response may be blunted in response to the either DMAA or one of the other supplement ingredients, namely the undisclosed amounts of Bacopa Monnieri, Bauhinia Purpurea, Cirsium Oolygophyllum, or Yohimbe bark extract (cf. Figure 1 | note: we know from previous studies that the 100mg of caffeine can't be the problem).Figure 3: Oxidative stress measured in MDA per mg or protein (left) and mRNA activity PGC-1A, a primary
marker of exercise-induced mitochondrial biogenesis (Zovico. 2016).
Since this occurs only with the high dose of the supplement, i.e. 25.8 mg/kg or ~1.5-2 caps for a human being. This effect is bad, but not downright ugly - speaking of which... - The Ugly: OEP simply stops to work -- If you belong to the group of former OEP users I've previously alluded to and/or have used any other DMAA product more than once or twice, you will probably remember "the Ugly", anyway: After only a few workouts "on OEP" (or any other DMAA) products, the effects began to vanish.
And as if that was not bad enough, the stimulant actually began to make you tired - as tired as it made the rodents in the study at hand, whose running performance decreased significantly (by up to 45% in the case of the running distance after high dose consumption) over the course of the 4-week supplementation period compared to the performance of the control group on day one (see Figure 3).Figure 3: Relative endurance performance with acute and chronic (4 wks) supplementation (Zovico. 2016); all data expressed relative to the values of the control group on day 1 (cf. Figure 2).
Whether that's related to and/or a consequence of the previously discussed reduction in PGC-alpha expression in the chronically supplemented rodents would have to be investigated in future, studies - it does not seem unlikely, to say the least.
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This study raises the question: Can you become caffeine-resistant, too? Learn the answer. |
References:
- Garc�a-Cort�s, Miren, et al. "Hepatotoxicity by Dietary Supplements: A Tabular Listing and Clinical Characteristics." International journal of molecular sciences 17.4 (2016): 537.
- Zovico, et al. "Effects of controlled doses of Oxyelite Pro on physical performance in rats." Nutrition & Metabolism201613:90 | DOI: 10.1186/s12986-016-0152-4 [ahead of print].
DMAA / OxyElitePro - The Good, the Bad and the Downright Ugly - More Powerful (+180% Perf.) Than You'd Think, but ...
DMAA / OxyElitePro - The Good, the Bad and the Downright Ugly - More Powerful (+180% Perf.) Than You'd Think, but ...
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