The Effects Of Steroids On Muscle Training
What are steroids? Steroids are synthetic chemicals that mimic the hormones
produced by the body. Hormones control bodily functions and are separated into
various classifications such as adrenal, cortical, cardiac, bile salts,
vitamins, and sex hormones. Anabolic steroids that build muscle tissue are
classified as sex hormones and they stimulate the action of the male sex hormone
testosterone. When testosterone is released at the appropriate time it has the
natural effects of creating body size, bone size, body hair, sex organ
maturation, and muscle tissue development. They often have many different trade
names or brand names. Commonly used anabolic steroids are Anavar, Sustanon, and
Dianabol. Anabolic steroids are prescription-only medicines. They are not
controlled under the misuse of drugs act. It is not illegal to possess them for
personal use. It is an offense to supply them. They can only be acquired from a
chemist with a doctor's prescription. In addition, there is a large illicit
market in anabolic steroids. The primary use of anabolic-androgenic steroids is
in replacement therapy for male testosterone. Other medical uses include growth
promotion in certain forms of stunted growth, osteoporosis, mammary carcinoma,
animas, and hereditary angioneurotic edema. The use of various physical and
chemical aids in performance enhancement has been a feature of athletic
competition since the beginning of recorded history. The ancient Greeks ate
sesame seeds, bufotenin was used by the berserks in Norwegian mythology, and the
Andean Indians and the Australian aborigines chewed, respectively, coca leaves
and the pituri plant for stimulating and anti-fatiguing effects (Bowman, 1980).
Athletes have used anabolic steroids to enhance appearance and performance for
years.
The first ergogenic use of anabolic-androgenic steroids was reported back
in the 1950's among weightlifters and bodybuilders. Bowman reported that
one-third of a sample of elite track and field athletes in Great Britain
admitted to systematic anabolic-androgenic steroid use by 1972 (Bowman, 1980).
Silvester reported that 68% of a sample interviewed at the 1972 Olympic Games
from 7 different countries, and who were competing in such diverse activities as
throwing, jumping, vaulting, sprinting, and running up to 5000m, admitted to
having used anabolic-androgenic steroids (Bowman, 1980). Although it was
actually suggested early in 1973 and stressed later, it is now evident that the
use of anabolic-androgenic steroids is not limited to the elite athletes but has
now trickled down to the amateur, professional, college, high school, and even
junior high athletes. Due to the estimated prevalence of non-medical
anabolic-androgenic steroid use and the implications for society and public
health there were several scientific meetings set up. Moreover, a technical
review at the National Institute on Drug Abuse in 1989 was set up, and both
federal and state investigations to reclassify anabolic-androgenic steroids as
controlled substances despite arguments from the American Medical Association.
Patterns of anabolic-androgenic steroid use among athletes have been determined
from several surveys. Hickson and Kurowski interviewed 24 weight-training
athletes at a gymnasium in a metropolitan area of the southwestern United
States. The Subjects surveyed took a combined steroid dose of four to eight
times the recommended medical dose, Used more than one anabolic-androgenic
steroid at a time, which is known as stacking, and combined the use of
intravenous and oral anabolic-androgenic steroids (Hickson, 1986, p. 465).
Although Hickson and Kurowski questioned a specific sample of
anabolic-androgenic steroid users, they concluded that their subjects seemed to
be representative of the type of athletes who used anabolic-androgenic steroids.
Two other groups of people also conducted very similar surveys and found that
their subjects were also taking well over the recommended medical dose. In 1990
Baldoenzi and Giada conducted a survey and found that 110 out of 250
weightlifters he interviewed in several gymnasiums in the metropolitan Chicago
area, many of, which had no intentions of being competitive, also used a variety
of anabolic-androgenic steroids.