Anadrol vs Anastrozole

FDA Approved vs FDA Approved
monitor Researched · 90% Aromatase inhibitors like anastrozole are ineffective at controlling Anadrol-specific estrogenic side effects because Anadrol does not aromatize. Its estrogenic activity is believed to result from direct estrogen receptor activation by the compound or its metabolites. An AI may still be needed to control estrogen from the testosterone base, but will not address Anadrol-related water retention or gynecomastia.

Molecular Data

Anadrol Anastrozole
Weight 332.48 Da 293.37 Da
Half-life ~8-9 hours ~40-50 hours
Type 17-alpha alkylated anabolic steroid (C21H32O3) Nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor (triazole derivative)

Key Benefits

Anadrol
01 Rapid and dramatic increases in muscle mass and bodyweight
02 Exceptional strength gains, often noticeable within the first week
03 Potent stimulation of erythropoietin and red blood cell production
04 Increased appetite and nutrient partitioning in some users
05 Improved recovery between training sessions
06 Full, round muscle appearance due to intramuscular water and glycogen retention
07 FDA-approved treatment for various forms of anemia
Anastrozole
01 Potent reduction of circulating estradiol levels (70-80% at standard dose)
02 Prevents gynecomastia during testosterone or anabolic steroid cycles
03 Reduces estrogen-driven water retention and bloating
04 Helps control estrogen-related blood pressure elevation
05 Oral dosing with long half-life allows flexible scheduling (EOD or E3D)
06 Reversible inhibition allows estrogen recovery after discontinuation
07 Well-characterized pharmacokinetics with decades of clinical data

Side Effects

Anadrol
Significant water retention and bloating (estrogenic, not aromatase-mediated)
Elevated blood pressure (fluid volume and RBC increase)
Severe liver stress and elevated liver enzymes (AST/ALT)
Back pumps and lower back pain during exercise
Headaches (often blood pressure-related)
Appetite suppression (paradoxical for a mass-building compound)
Lethargy and fatigue (hepatic strain-related)
Acne and oily skin
Suppression of natural testosterone production
Anastrozole
Joint pain, stiffness, or dryness (from reduced estrogen-mediated joint lubrication)
Hot flashes or flushing
Fatigue and general malaise
Mood changes (flat affect, irritability, or low mood)
Decreased libido (when estrogen is suppressed too aggressively)
Headache
Contraindications
Pre-existing liver disease or significantly elevated liver enzymes
Prostate cancer or breast cancer in males
Nephrotic phase of nephritis
Hypercalcemia (Anadrol can exacerbate calcium levels)
Pregnancy (Category X - causes virilization of the female fetus)
Known hypersensitivity to oxymetholone
Concurrent use of other 17-alpha alkylated oral steroids (compounded liver toxicity)
Known hypersensitivity to anastrozole or any excipients
Premenopausal women (not indicated and potentially harmful to reproductive function)
Pregnancy or breastfeeding (teratogenic risk)
Severe hepatic impairment
Pre-existing severe osteoporosis or high fracture risk
Concurrent use with tamoxifen or estrogen-containing therapies

Research Evidence

Anadrol Anastrozole
Status FDA Approved FDA Approved
References 5 studies 5 studies
Latest 2018
FDA Approved Yes Yes

This comparison is for educational and research purposes only. Consult a healthcare professional before use.