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Barry Bonds -vs- Steroids
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Anabolic steroids are:
Synthetic substances related to the male sex hormones (androgens). They
promote growth of skeletal muscle (anabolic effect) and the development of male sexual
characteristics (androgenic effects), and also have other effects. (The term
"anabolic steroids" will be used throughout this bulletin because of its
familiarity, although the proper term for these compounds is
"anabolic/androgenic" steroids.)
Used by doctors to treat conditions that occur when the body produces
abnormally low amounts of testosterone, such as delayed puberty and some types of
impotence, and also to treat body wasting in patients with AIDS and other diseases.
Legally available in the United States only by prescription. Anabolic
steroid abusers obtain drugs that have been made in clandestine laboratories (sometimes
with poor quality control standards), smuggled from other countries, or diverted illegally
from U.S. pharmacies.
Distinct from steroidal supplements. In the United States, supplements
such as dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and androstenedione (street name Andro) can be
purchased legally without a perscription through many commercial sources including health
food stores. They are often taken because the user believes they have anabolic effects.
Anabolic steroid abuse is:
Increasing among adolescents, and most rapidly among females. The 1999
Monitoring the Future study, a NIDA-funded survey of drug abuse among middle school and
high school students across the United States, recorded that 2.7 percent of 8th-graders,
2.7 percent of 10th-graders, and 2.9 percent of 12th-graders reported having taken
anabolic steroids at least once in their lives. These figures represent increases since
1991 of approximately 50 percent among 8th- and 10th-graders and 38 percent among
12th-graders.
Probably widespread among athletes and would-be sports competitors at
all levels, although few data are available to provide exact estimates of prevalence. Many
anabolic steroid abusers are unwilling to report the practice, because the International
Olympic Committee and many other amateur and professional sports organizations have banned
anabolic steroids.
Motivated in most cases by a desire to build muscles and improve sports
performance. Some individuals are motivated by erroneous perceptions of their own bodies
(that is, a mistaken belief that they look underweight or obese) and others by a desire to
prevent recurrence of physical or sexual attacks they have experienced.
Anabolic steroids are taken:
Orally as tablets or capsules (Anadrol® [oxymetholone], Oxandrin®
[oxandrolone], Dianabol® [ methandrostenolone], Winstrol® [stanozolol], and others); by
injection into muscles (Deca-Durabolin® [nandrolone decanoate], Durabolin® [nandrolone
phenpropionate], Depo-Testosterone® [testosterone cypionate], Equipoise® [boldenone
undecylenate], and others); or by ointment preparations rubbed into the skin. Doses taken
by abusers can be up to 100 times more than the doses used for treating medical
conditions.
In combinations, a practice called "stacking." Abusers
frequently take two or more anabolic steroids together, mixing oral and/or injectable
types, sometimes adding drugs such as stimulants or painkillers. The rationale for
stacking is a belief-which has not been tested by science-that the different drugs
interact to produce a greater effect on muscle size than could be obtained by simply
increasing the dose of a single drug.
In cyclic dosage regimens, a practice called "pyramiding." At
the beginning of a cycle, the person starts with low doses of the stacked substances and
then gradually increases the doses for 6 to 12 weeks. In the second half of the cycle, the
doses are slowly decreased to zero. This is sometimes followed by a second cycle during
which the person continues to train, but without drugs. Abusers believe that pyramiding
allows the body time to adjust to the high doses, and the drug-free cycle allows time for
the body's hormonal system to recuperate. As with stacking, the perceived benefits of
pyramiding have not been substantiated scientifically.
Health consequences associated with
anabolic steroid abuse include:
In boys and men, reduced sperm production, shrinking of the
testicles, impotence, difficulty or pain in urinating, baldness, and irreversible breast
enlargement (gynecomastia).
In girls and women, development of more masculine
characteristics, such as decreased body fat and breast size, deepening of the voice,
excessive growth of body hair, and loss of scalp hair, as well as clitoral enlargement.
In adolescents of both sexes, premature termination of the
adolescent growth spurt, so that for the rest of their lives, abusers remain shorter than
they would have been without the drugs.
In males and females of all ages, potentially fatal liver cysts
and liver cancer; blood clotting, cholesterol changes, and hypertension, each of which can
promote heart attack and stroke; and acne. Although not all scientists agree, some
interpret available evidence to show that anabolic steroid abuse-particularly in high
doses-promotes aggression that can manifest itself as fighting, physical and sexual abuse,
armed robbery, and property crimes such as burglary and vandalism. Upon stopping anabolic
steroids, some abusers experience symptoms of depressed mood, fatigue, restlessness, loss
of appetite, insomnia, reduced sex drive, headache, muscle and joint pain, and the desire
to take more anabolic steroids.
In injectors, infections resulting from the use of shared needles
or nonsterile equipment, including HIV/AIDS, hepatitis B and C, and infective
endocarditis, a potentially fatal inflammation of the inner lining of the heart. Bacterial
infections can develop at the injection site, causing pain and abscess
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