Anastrozole vs Oxandrolone

FDA Approved vs Well Studied
avoid Mechanism-based · 64% Both Anastrozole and Oxandrolone carry hepatotoxic risk. Combining hepatotoxic compounds significantly increases liver damage potential. If unavoidable, include liver support (TUDCA/NAC) and monitor ALT/AST frequently.

Molecular Data

Anastrozole Oxandrolone
Weight 293.37 Da 306.44 Da
Half-life ~40-50 hours ~9-10 hours
Type Nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor (triazole derivative) 17-alpha-alkylated anabolic-androgenic steroid (C19H30O3)

Key Benefits

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
Oxandrolone
01 Promotes lean muscle mass gains with minimal water retention
02 Supports recovery of lost body weight following surgery, trauma, or chronic illness
03 Reduces bone pain associated with osteoporosis and improves bone mineral density
04 Does not aromatize to estrogen, avoiding estrogen-related side effects
05 Well-studied safety profile in women, children, and burn patients
06 Enhances nitrogen retention and protein synthesis during caloric deficit
07 Attenuates glucocorticoid-induced catabolism in post-surgical and burn patients
08 Lower androgenic potency compared to most oral anabolic steroids

Side Effects

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
Oxandrolone
HDL cholesterol suppression (dose-dependent, most significant lipid effect)
LDL cholesterol elevation
Mild hepatic stress (elevated liver enzymes ALT/AST)
Suppression of endogenous testosterone production
Mild headaches
Nausea or gastrointestinal discomfort
Changes in libido (increase or decrease depending on hormonal context)
Oily skin and mild acne
Contraindications
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
Known or suspected prostate cancer
Breast cancer in males
Breast cancer with hypercalcemia in females
Pregnancy (Category X - known to cause fetal harm)
Nephrosis or nephrotic phase of nephritis
Hypercalcemia
Severe hepatic dysfunction or active liver disease
Hypersensitivity to oxandrolone or any formulation component

Research Evidence

Anastrozole Oxandrolone
Status FDA Approved Well Studied
References 5 studies 5 studies
Latest September 2023
FDA Approved Yes Yes

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