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The term "steroid" is a broad term for
naturally-occurring compounds having as a basis 17 carbon atoms arranged in four
rings. Estrogen and birth control pills are types of steroids.
Corticosteroids, which are catabolic hormones that break tissue down, are often
used in medical treatment. However, most media sources that use the term
"steroids" are referring to anabolic steroids - the kind of steroids that build
up tissue and muscle. Anabolic steroids are synthetic versions of the primary
male sex hormone, testosterone.
Testosterone is both anabolic and androgenic, meaning
that it not only builds tissue but also helps control the development and
maintenance of male sexual characteristics. The average man produces about
4-7mgs of testosterone a day. It is not uncommon for doctors to prescribe a
replacement dosage of approximately 100mg weekly to help maintain normal levels
for men whose bodies are not properly producing the hormone. Non-medical
steroid users - the population against which recent laws have been aimed -
typically administer between 10 and 100 times that dosage.
The earliest research on this substance occurred in 1767
but it was not until the 1930s that Dutch pharmacologist Ernst Laqueur managed
to isolate testosterone itself and thus allow for synthetic versions to be
produced. By the 1940s, and due in part to the publication of Paul de Kruif's
The Male Hormone, testosterone was widely hailed as the next "wonder drug" that
would promote greater well-being, energy and sexual restoration to aging men.
Anecdotal reports soon followed asserting that "steroids" (i.e. testosterone and
its synthetic variants) helped build muscle and shorten recovery times as well.
These early messages were mostly overwhelmed by negative
attention from within the field of sports, where "juicing" was considered to
give athletes an unfair advantage over their competitors. By 1975, steroids
were added to the Olympics' list of banned substances, and college and
professional sports soon followed. In 1988 trafficking in steroids became
illegal, and in 1990, against the advice of the American Medical Association,
the Drug Enforcement Agency, the Department of Health and Human Services and the
Food and Drug Administration, steroids were made into a Schedule III controlled
substance.
While typically safe when properly prescribed and
medically administered, the abuse of anabolic steroids may lead to health
problems. However, health risks associated with using steroids in mature adults
are, like most potent substances, primarily related to dose levels and duration
of use. Prolonged use of oral steroids ("alkylated" steroids) can lead to
problems with the liver. Injectable steroids, by far the most widely used type,
are administered intramuscularly and are much less stressful to the liver. The
most common adverse effects of anabolic steroids in adult males are acne,
accelerated male pattern baldness in predisposed individuals, and reduction in
testicular volume. Some users may experience excessive hair growth,
gynecomastia (enlarged breasts in males), and unfavorable changes in
cholesterol. The side effects of steroid use in women are more numerous and
more pronounced than in men. Non-medical steroid use by teenagers may lead to
adverse health consequences in addition to those risked by adult males, and such
use should be strongly discouraged.
Recent increases in federal steroid offense
sentencing place steroids on the same level as other Schedule III drugs like
Marinol and ketamine for purposes of quantification. This newly imposed
equivalency standard is misleading because one "unit" of steroids is very unlike
one "unit" of other Schedule III drugs. A unit or dose of steroids has no
appreciable psychoactive or physiological effect whatsoever. Also, the patterns
of steroid use and possession differ greatly from those of typical drug users.
Non-medical steroid users customarily buy in bulk in order for the steroids to
last for a full, pre-planned cycle of use that may last for weeks or months.
Many steroid users also "stack" (use different kinds of steroids at the same
time) to maximize muscle growth while minimizing or avoiding unwanted adverse
effects. Federal steroid offenders are likely to be treated disproportionately
harshly under the new sentencing model, as they tend to possess much greater
quantities than other Schedule III drug offenders. It is not uncommon for
personal users to be indicted as dealers and face longer prison sentences based
upon the erroneous presumption that those in possession of large quantities of
steroids are clearly possessing "with intent" to sell. Although these changes
in the federal sentencing rules were largely motivated by concerns over illicit
use of steroids to cheat among professional sports players, research has shown
that the vast majority of non-medical steroid use is motivated by cosmetic
reasons, especially among non-athletes.
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