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  2. Pre-Workout Side Effects: 5 Side Effects to Understand ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/pre-workout-side-effects-5-105700392...

    While pre-workout can give you a boost on days you’re feeling sluggish, you’ll want to keep an eye on any side effects you experience, like feeling jittery from the extra caffeine.

  3. N,N-Dimethylphenethylamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N,N-Dimethylphenethylamine

    It is also being used in pre-workout and bodybuilding supplements with claims of a stimulant effect. [4] There is also evidence suggesting that N,N-DMPEA acts as a TAAR1 agonist in humans, [5] and as a 5-HT1A ligand in rats.

  4. Performance-enhancing substance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Performance-enhancing...

    The classifications of substances as performance-enhancing substances are not entirely clear-cut and objective. As in other types of categorization, certain prototype performance enhancers are universally classified as such (like anabolic steroids), whereas other substances (like vitamins and protein supplements) are virtually never classified as performance enhancers despite their effects on ...

  5. Doctors Warn Extreme Workouts Have Dangerous Side Effects - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2014-02-28-doctors-warn...

    Doctors across the country are arguing the popular CrossFit workout could do more harm than good. The cross-training program urges exercisers to go harder and faster, all while pushing through ...

  6. Bodybuilding supplement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodybuilding_supplement

    Other products by supplement designer and CEO of Driven Sports, Matt Cahill, have contained dangerous substances causing blindness or liver damage, and his pre-workout supplement Craze was found to contain illegal stimulants [44] that resulted in several athletes failing drug tests. [45]

  7. Methylhexanamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methylhexanamine

    Methylhexanamine (also known as methylhexamine, 1,3-dimethylamylamine, 1,3-DMAA, dimethylamylamine, and DMAA; trade names Forthane and Geranamine) is an indirect sympathomimetic drug invented and developed by Eli Lilly and Company and marketed as an inhaled nasal decongestant from 1948 until it was voluntarily withdrawn from the market in the 1980s.