Publication Date: May 1, 1999
Disclaimer: Discussion of pharmaceutical agents below is presented for
information only. Nothing here is meant to take the place of advice
from a licensed health care practitioner. Consult a physician before
taking any medication.
Are you looking for a very effective fat burner allowing you to
rapidly loss body fat with no diet and no side effect? In that case,
Triac is not for you. Triac is no wonder drug. Chemically assisted
fat loss is a trade off: you give up some fat while increasing the
risk for potential metabolic disturbances. Let's clarify this
concept as well as the real role and action as well as the optimal
doses of Triac while off a diet.
What is Triac?
First of all, I would like to make it clear that I am not
involved in the sales of Triac. I do not get a commission on sales
either. I am neither in favor nor against it. I do not care about
the issue of whether it is legal or not to sell Triac. What I see is
that at least for now, Triac is easily available to you and you are
trying to make up your mind about it. Therefore, here is some
hopefully useful information.
First of all, realize that as far as thyroid extracts are
concerned, Triac is the only molecule freely available for now on. I
have heard that another one will be launched soon but it will rather
be an addition to Triac rather than a replacement or a substitution
of it. All this to say that if you want to use a thyroid hormone,
Triac is your only easy choice. If all the thyroid hormones were
freely available, Triac would not be my first pick. But this is a
moot issue. It is just like with anabolics. Testosterone is nobody's
first pick, yet most bodybuilders are very happy while on it.
Triac is advertised as a thyroid prohormone for simplicity's
sake. In fact, it is not a precursor but rather a metabolite of
thyroid hormones. In other words, it is not a product which results
in more thyroid hormones as would be expected with a pro-hormone.
Rather, it is an end product of thyroid hormones which participates
in the negative feedback for the thyroid hormone production and will
therefore results in less thyroid hormone.
So we are dealing with a very important distinction here and not
a mere detail. Taking Triac will result in a smaller thyroid gland,
a lessened thyroid output and lower levels of the classical thyroid
hormones T3 and T4. Saying this usually frightens listeners. I do
not know why. Taking anabolic steroids produces exactly the same
effects on the testes and on natural testosterone level. Even
creatine supplementation will reduce your natural creatine
production to nothing! Who cares about this? Nobody! So why should
people worry so much when the thyroid gland is mentioned?
Triac is no amphetamine
It is probably because of all the horror stories we hear about
women or fitness contestants who have used various thyroid
medications to get leaner and instead became irreversibly obese when
they stopped using them. We are talking about a marginal number of
women here. Thyroid hormones are usually not the main culprits
either. Many of those women had severe problems with self-image and
eating disorders in the first place. They may have begun training in
an attempt to hide those problems. Then, one day, they stumbled upon
a "miraculous" drug called amphetamine (or one of the other "speed"
type drugs like Ionamin, Tenuate, etc.). It looks like amphetamines
are able to "solve" all the problems a woman and a man could face in
life. No more food binging, a stabilization of the body weight to
low levels, a constant state of happiness. One also feels very
energetic and bright.
This ideal state lasts as long as the drug works. Unfortunately,
the effects slowly wane. One could increase the dosages but this
strategy is usually very costly and doctors are not willing to
prescribe those drugs for an extended period of time. The second
solution is usually to stop the medication. Most people fail to do
so successfully. Many will keep on using amphetamines as they are
addicted. Those who succeed in stopping are in for a terrible
experience. They start eating like crazy, they feel tired all day
and all night long, they cannot train anymore, they cannot work
either and they get fat, very fat. The depressing effects due to the
drug withdrawal worsen as a result.
Most are not willing to admit the real reasons for those changes
to their friends because they are too ashamed of the amphetamine
image and therefore blame the thyroid medications.
The natural thyroid disturbances
Whenever Triac is mentioned, people get scared that it is going
to disturb their thyroid gland. This assumes that their thyroid
gland was healthy in the first place and that it was naturally
producing enough thyroid hormones. Very often, this is not the case.
Their thyroid gland is too "slow" despite a low circulating thyroid
hormone level. It is especially true in women. This is expected as
scientists have discovered that lean body mass was a major
determinant of the size of the thyroid gland in the long run. As
women carry far less lean mass than men do, it is normal that their
thyroid output should be far smaller. In fact, disproportionately
too small.
Here are the main symptoms of a "lazy" thyroid: Your body
temperature is low and you complain of feeling cold while the others
do not. You are tired, overweight and a bit depressed. More often
than not, a shortage of thyroid hormones is to blame. As those
people start to use thyroid extracts, they feel much better and
start to lose weight slowly. Thyroid hormones possess a
repartitioning property. They waste away dietary calories in the
form of energy and heat while a lack of them reduces temperature and
available energy while favoring storage of calories as fat. There is
one problem with this replacement therapy, though. People are always
talking about stopping it. They feel it does them good but they
worry about their thyroid gland.
What they have to realize is that their thyroid gland was
disturbed in the first place and that replacement is for life. Of
course, as those people stop taking the thyroid extracts, they
recover their former unwell state which they had forgotten about.
They start complaining and blame the thyroid extracts for creating
this "new" disturbance. It is obvious that their thyroid gland has
trouble recovering because it has always malfunctioned. But adverse
effects due to only a careful use of thyroid extracts are not that
numerous. It is all the underlying problems which are uncovered when
thyroid medications are discontinued.
If your doctor is not willing to prescribe thyroid hormones
despite a constant state of low T3 output on top of all the
temperature and energy problems described above, Triac can be used
as replacement. You can also threaten your MD that if he is not
willing to prescribe thyroid meds to you, you are going to use
megadoses of this freely available Triac.
Triac as replacement therapy
For those wanting to use Triac as replacement, let me repeat that
is not ideal but has the big advantage of being easy to get. Try one
pill for a few days and see what happens. Monitor your morning body
temperature. It should go up and ideally reach 36.5° to 37° C (97.9°
to 98.6° F). Do not aim for above 37° C (98.6° F) for replacement.
In some users, temperature will decrease. Do not base your
conclusion on only one measure, especially in women with all their
ovarian hormone fluctuations. Rather, do an average for a week. Of
course, do not forget to do so at least a week before using Triac to
get a baseline. With the new thermometers, you have no excuse for
not monitoring your temperature regularly.
If it truly goes down -- which is expected in some people -- stop
using Triac as it is not for you. It means that the suppressing
actions of Triac have predominated over its peripheral effects. On
the other hand, if your temperature elevation is still too small
after a week, try two pills. Ideally you should not go above two.
Off season, one can also use Triac in an attempt to speed up
muscle growth while overeating a bit during a steroid cycle. In that
case, Triac can be used in order to minimize the potential fat
gains. This strategy is similar to the one described above as you do
not want to use too much Triac as it can cause muscle shrinkage
whenever abused.
The following is a recap of the dose response you can expect from
Triac compared to its thyroid inhibiting properties. The study was
performed Professor Mechelany and published in "les Annales
d'Endocrinologie." The study was performed on people in whom the
thyroid output was normal. The original Triac called Triacana (350
micrograms per pill) was used here for three weeks at each dosage.
TSH reflects the size of the thyroid gland, and therefore its
activity (i.e.: the higher the TSH values, the bigger the thyroid
gland should be and the more it is supposed to be active in people
with normal thyroid). The peripheral effects of Triac were monitored
with heart rate and body weight losses.
|
Dose of Triac |
TSH |
Changes in body weight (kg.) |
Heart rate |
| 0 |
38.6 |
0 |
76 |
| 3 |
11.5 |
-1.5 |
88 |
| 6 |
2.4 |
-2.1 |
89 |
| 9 |
0.38 |
-3.4 |
94 |
| 12 |
0.14 |
-3.8 |
110 |
Some obvious conclusions
One can see that past 3 Triacana a day (which is the equivalent
of one American Triac), TSH suppression is clearly visible. You can
weaken this suppressive action of Triac by using it only once a day
(preferably in the morning) rather than in the classical 3 times
recommended with Triacana. Peripheral effects are obvious but are
still mild with a moderate elevation of heart rate and a small
weight loss. This dose is the upper ideal limit for replacement. You
slowly lose fat while not putting too much strain on your heart.
Your thyroid gland is weakened but still alive.
By doubling the dosage (taking two by the American standard), you
also double the weight loss and experience another mild heart rate
elevation. On the other hand, your thyroid activity is down to
almost nothing. This is a dosage you can maintain in case you want
to trim down your body before your summer vacation to look better on
the beach. This high dose is not meant to be maintained for more
than two months at a time.
Taking 9 Triacana a day looks like the maximal dosage. Weight
loss reaches around than 2.5 pounds a week (though all of this is
not fat, please take into account that no low calorie diet was
followed either). Heart rate is elevated but if you are not too old
and if you are healthy this should be OK at least for a while. This
is a dosage that can be maintained for a maximum of 60 - 90 days if
you are in a hurry to shed fat. Your TSH has almost reached rock
bottom which may be a problem as you stop using Triac. We will see
next month how to safely proceed to boost TSH while keeping body fat
low and therefore avoiding the fat rebound.
Using 12 Triacana a day looks like too much. Fat loss is not
significantly enhanced compared to 9 Triacana a day, yet heart rate
is boosted to alarming levels. TSH level has reached rock bottom
which will make it even harder to jump start your thyroid as you
stop Triac. It may looks like an attractive dosage for the
proponents of the more-is-better theory, but this is also a
dangerous zone.
Triac while on a diet
I know that many of you are also interested to hear about Triac
manipulation while on a diet. This is what I will discuss next
month. We will see that as you reduce your food intake, your natural
Triac production will increase. This not good. The Triac elevation
is one of the reasons why your thyroid gland will produce less
thyroid hormones during caloric restriction. In fact, a Triac
inhibitor while on a diet would allow you to get leaner more easily.
At that point, the endogenous (natural) Triac is different from
the exogenous Triac (the pills). We are dealing with the same
molecule but in one case, we are passive before its elevation and
have to suffer its noxious actions while in the other case, we are
active and deliberately manipulating the whole fat loss machinery. I
will also tell you next month how to stop Triac while continuing to
shed fat.