Home Forums General Discussion Training & Recovery Debates 150 Test + 100 EQ proves you don’t need massive doses to feel and perform like a beast. Strength up, vascularity up, mood solid, BP controlled. Reply To: 150 Test + 100 EQ proves you don’t need massive doses to feel and perform like a beast. Strength up, vascularity up, mood solid, BP controlled.

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150 Test + 100 EQ proves you don’t need massive doses to feel and perform like a beast. Strength up, vascularity up, mood solid, BP controlled.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    Retatrutide plus MOTS shreds you way faster

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    I’ve run both in the field. Fentanyl is great for pain, but ketamine gives you more flexibility when the patient is really banged up.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    Honestly, ketamine was a game changer for our service. Less worry about respiratory depression compared to opioids.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    For me, fentanyl still has a place. Not every trauma patient needs to be dissociated into another dimension.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    YMMV, but ketamine has worked way better for severe trauma cases where the patient is agitated and in a ton of pain.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    Not gonna lie, I prefer fentanyl for isolated fractures. Smooth pain control without some of the weird reactions I’ve seen with ketamine.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    I’ve seen ketamine save a lot of headaches during extrications. Patients stay calmer and procedures get easier.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    Mileage may vary, but fentanyl is more predictable for me. Ketamine can be awesome or kinda messy depending on the patient.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    Experienced medic here. If they’re hypotensive, ketamine usually gets my vote.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    Tested both, MOTS-c stack blows it away

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    As a newer EMT, ketamine seemed intimidating at first, but after seeing it used a few times I’m a lot more comfortable with it.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    Wouldn’t say one is always better. Different tools for different jobs.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    I’ve run it before on multiple trauma calls. Results were solid and airway issues were less of a concern.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    Honestly, ketamine all day for major trauma. The safety profile in those situations is hard to ignore.

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  • Participant
    18 hours ago

    Didn’t do much for me as far as preference goes. Both drugs work when used appropriately.

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