Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksNew pageNew folderImport Word DocumentBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ===== What Are Steroids? ===== Steroids are a class of hormones derived from cholesterol, characterized by a four-ring polyphenol structure. Two primary types exist with distinct medical purposes and physiological effects: ==== Catabolic Steroids (Glucocorticoids) ==== Produced naturally in the adrenal cortex or synthesized pharmaceutically, glucocorticoids regulate metabolism, immune response, and stress adaptation. Their catabolic nature distinguishes them from muscle-building anabolic steroids. **Medical Applications**: • Anti-inflammatory treatment for autoimmune disorders (lupus, rheumatoid arthritis) • Immunosuppression in organ transplantation • Management of severe allergic reactions and asthma exacerbations • Topical treatment for dermatological conditions (psoriasis, contact dermatitis) **Mechanism of Action**: Binds to cytoplasmic glucocorticoid receptors → translocates to nucleus → modulates transcription of anti-inflammatory proteins while suppressing pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1, TNF-α) **Adverse Effects**: ^ **Short-Term** ^ **Long-Term** ^ | Hyperglycemia | Osteoporosis | | Fluid retention | Muscle wasting | | Mood disturbances | Adrenal suppression | | Hypertension | Cataracts/glaucoma | ==== Anabolic-Androgenic Steroids (AAS) ==== Synthetic derivatives of testosterone designed to amplify muscle-building (anabolic) properties while maintaining masculinizing (androgenic) effects. Medical uses include treatment of hypogonadism, anemia, and muscle-wasting conditions. **Pharmacological Classification**: • **17α-alkylated orals**: Hepatically metabolized (e.g., Oxandrolone, Stanozolol) • **Esterified injectables**: Slow-release depot formulations (e.g., Testosterone Cypionate, Nandrolone Decanoate) ===== Mechanisms of Action ===== AAS exert effects through multiple pathways: **1. Genomic Signaling Pathway** • Androgen receptor (AR) binding → DNA transcription → protein synthesis • 5-10x increase in myofibrillar protein synthesis rates **2. Non-Genomic Pathways** • Rapid activation of MAPK/ERK signaling within minutes • Enhanced calcium flux in sarcoplasmic reticulum • Nitric oxide-mediated vasodilation **3. Anti-Catabolic Effects** • Competitive inhibition of glucocorticoid receptors • Reduction of cortisol-induced proteolysis by 40-60% • Downregulation of ubiquitin-proteasome pathway **4. Hematopoietic Stimulation** • Increased erythropoietin production → elevated hematocrit (50-60%) ===== Adverse Effects and Risk Mitigation ===== Comprehensive risk management requires understanding compound-specific toxicities and preventive strategies: **Cardiovascular System** ^ **Pathology** ^ **Mechanism** ^ **Prevention** ^ | Atherosclerosis | HDL suppression (↓30-60%), LDL elevation | Omega-3 supplementation, regular cardio | | Hypertension | Renal sodium reabsorption, RAAS activation | ACE inhibitors, sodium restriction | | Cardiomyopathy | Myocardial AR activation, fibrosis | Cardiac MRI monitoring, telmisartan | **Hepatotoxicity** • **17α-alkylated compounds** cause cholestasis, peliosis hepatis, and hepatocellular carcinoma via hepatic stress • Prevention: Periodic liver enzymes (ALT/AST) monitoring, NAC supplementation, ≤6-week oral cycles **Endocrine Disruption** • **HPTA suppression**: Doses ≥300mg/week suppress LH/FSH >90% for 4-18 months post-cycle • **Gynecomastia**: Estradiol conversion via aromatase enzyme (CYP19) • Management: PCT protocols (hCG + SERMs), intra-cycle aromatase inhibitors ===== Clinical Applications and Cycling Protocols ===== **Therapeutic Indications**: • Testosterone replacement therapy (100-200mg/week) • HIV-associated wasting (Nandrolone 200mg/week) • Severe burn recovery (Oxandrolone 20mg/day) **Performance-Enhancing Protocols**: **Bulking Phase** (Example 16-week cycle) • Testosterone Enanthate: 500mg/week (Weeks 1-16) • Nandrolone Decanoate: 400mg/week (Weeks 1-14) • Dianabol: 30mg/day (Weeks 1-4) • Anastrozole: 0.5mg E3D (Estrogen control) **Cutting Phase** (Example 12-week cycle) • Trenbolone Acetate: 50mg EOD (Weeks 1-10) • Masteron: 400mg/week (Weeks 3-12) • T3 Cytomel: 50mcg/day (Weeks 5-10) • Cabergoline: 0.25mg twice weekly (Prolactin control) ===== Neuroendocrine Development Considerations ===== **Critical Advisory**: AAS are contraindicated for individuals <25 years due to irreversible developmental consequences: **Neurological Impact**: • Prefrontal cortex maturation disruption (continues until age 25) • Permanent 8-15% reduction in hippocampal volume • Long-term cognitive deficits in spatial memory and executive function **Endocrine Consequences**: • Premature epiphyseal plate closure via estrogen conversion • Permanent Leydig cell desensitization → lifelong TRT dependence • Disrupted HPTA maturation → persistent hypogonadism **Evidence Base**: • MRI studies demonstrate altered white matter integrity (Frontal Assessment Battery scores ↓22%) • Longitudinal data shows 5.3x increased depression/anxiety prevalence in adolescent AAS users ===== Gender-Specific Protocols ===== **Female Considerations**: • Preferred compounds: Anavar (2.5-10mg/day), Primobolan (50mg/week) • Virilization monitoring: Vocal pitch analysis, clitoral sensitivity tracking • Emergency protocol: Immediate cessation + tamoxifen at first signs of virilization **Post-Cycle Therapy (PCT)**: ^ **Compound** ^ **Dosage** ^ **Duration** ^ **Mechanism** ^ | hCG | 2000IU EOD | 2-3 weeks | Leydig cell reactivation | | Tamoxifen | 20mg/day | 4-6 weeks | Estrogen receptor blockade | | Clomiphene | 50mg/day | 4 weeks | GnRH stimulation | ===== Scientific Evaluation Framework ===== Critical analysis methodology for AAS research: **Study Assessment Criteria**: 1. **Funding transparency**: Industry-sponsored trials show 5.2x bias toward favorable outcomes 2. **Model relevance**: Rodent vs. human pharmacokinetic differences (e.g., murine SHBG absence) 3. **Dosing validity**: Clinical relevance of administered concentrations 4. **Endpoint selection**: Surrogate markers vs. hard outcomes (mortality, MI incidence) **Evidence Hierarchy**: • Level 1: Randomized controlled trials (e.g., effects on LBM in hypogonadal men) • Level 2: Longitudinal cohort studies (e.g., cardiovascular morbidity in retired athletes) • Level 3: Case-control studies (e.g., hepatotoxicity profiles) • Level 4: Mechanistic in vitro research ===== Conclusion and Ethical Considerations ===== AAS pharmacology represents a double-edged sword with significant therapeutic potential counterbalanced by substantial health risks. Responsible use mandates: • Pre-cycle cardiovascular risk stratification (CAC scoring, lipid profiling) • On-cycle hematological monitoring (hematocrit <54%, platelets >150k/μL) • Post-cycle fertility preservation strategies (cryopreservation) • Absolute avoidance during developmental periods (<25 years) The most significant risk factor remains inadequate knowledge - comprehensive education should precede any pharmacological intervention. intro/aas.txt Last modified: 2025/07/31 17:52by admin