How do steroids affect your muscles and the rest of your body Anees Bahji

They’ve caused global scandals.

They’re banned
in most athletic competitions.

But are steroids actually bad for you?

The term “steroids” refers
to a broad category of molecules

that share a similar molecular structure,

but have many different functions.

When people talk about steroids
in the context of sports,

they’re referring to a subset of steroids
that resemble testosterone.

Though elite athletes and bodybuilders
began using these steroids in the 1950s,

today, most steroid users
are actually not competitive athletes,

but people seeking
a particular appearance.

These steroids have two main effects:
androgenic, or masculinizing,

and anabolic, or growth-promoting.

These effects mimic naturally-occurring
testosterone,

which drives the development
and maintenance

of male secondary sex characteristics
and general growth in everyone.

That means testosterone
and the synthetic steroids based on it

promote body and facial hair growth,
enlargement of the vocal cords

and deepening of the voice,
increased muscle mass and strength,

and increased stature and bone mass.

Recreational steroid users are after
the anabolic, growth promoting effects.

To make muscles grow, steroids
first promote protein synthesis—

proteins are essential building blocks
of all cells, tissues, and organs,

including muscles.

Steroids also block cortisol,

a signaling molecule that drives
the breakdown of substances

including proteins.

Finally, they may push the development
of muscle, rather than fat,

and boost our metabolism,
shrinking fat deposits.

These properties make steroids valuable
for treating many illnesses and injuries.

They can help people
with wasting illnesses,

like AIDS and certain cancers,

maintain muscle mass and help burn victims
recover lost muscle tissue.

So if steroids are used as medicine,

they must be safe to use recreationally,
right?

Well, it’s not that simple.

To create the desired muscle growth,

recreational steroid users must typically
take doses orders of magnitude higher

than those prescribed
for a medical condition.

Long term, high dose steroid usage
can have both undesirable

and outright harmful effects—

some of them dependent
on factors like age, sex,

and underlying health conditions.

We’re not sure
what all the risk factors are,

but we do know recreational steroid use
is particularly risky for adolescents.

During puberty, steroid use
can prompt bones to mature

before they’re done growing,
causing growth defects.

Adolescents are also most at risk

for the harmful psychiatric effects
of steroid use.

The most common of these, increased
impulsivity and increased aggression,

are well-known as “roid rage.”

Up to 60% of users
experience these effects.

But there are also less common,

more damaging psychiatric side effects
like mania and even psychosis.

Steroid use can damage organs
including the liver and kidneys,

and cause cardiovascular problems
like high blood pressure.

While some or all of those effects
may be reversible,

steroid use can also cause liver cancer,
especially in males.

Though recreational users take steroids
for their anabolic effects,

they also experience androgenic effects—
often undesired.

That can mean increased body hair,
enlargement of the clitoris,

and permanent voice deepening in females.

At the same time, excess testosterone-like
steroids can cause feminization in males,

because the body converts
the excess into estrogen.

This can lead to breast development
and shrinking testicles.

These effects are not uncommon—

about a third of male steroid users
experience them to some degree.

Excess steroid use can also reduce
fertility in males and females—

by reducing the sperm in semen or
by causing missed periods and conditions

like polycystic ovary syndrome.

All these effects may be reversible
if steroid use stops— but they may not be.

The specific steroid, the duration of use,

and other factors could play
a role in reversibility.

Finally, there’s mounting evidence

that users are susceptible
to steroid dependence.

They can develop tolerance and require
increasingly large doses over time.

This increases the risk
of harmful effects,

all of which are increasingly common
at higher doses

taken for longer durations.

Still, there remains little definitive
information

on how common and how reversible
almost any of the harms are

at different levels of use.

We don’t know enough, about
either risk factors or exposure levels,

to definitively say any recreational
steroid use will be harm-free.

他们引起了全球丑闻。

他们
在大多数体育比赛中被禁止。

但是类固醇真的对你有害吗?

术语“类固醇”是

指具有相似分子结构

但具有许多不同功能的广泛分子类别。

当人们
在运动背景下谈论类固醇时,

他们指的是类似于睾酮的类固醇子集

尽管精英运动员和健美运动员
在 1950 年代开始使用这些类固醇,但

今天,大多数类固醇
使用者实际上不是竞技运动员,

而是寻求
特定外观的人。

这些类固醇有两个主要作用:
雄激素,或男性化,

和合成代谢,或促进生长。

这些影响模仿了自然产生的
睾酮,

它推动

了男性第二性
征的发展和维持以及每个人的普遍成长。

这意味着睾酮
和基于它的合成类固醇

促进身体和面部毛发的生长、
声带的扩大

和声音的加深、
肌肉质量和力量的

增加,以及身材和骨量的增加。

娱乐类固醇使用者
追求合成代谢、促进生长的效果。

为了让肌肉生长,类固醇
首先促进蛋白质合成——

蛋白质是
所有细胞、组织和器官(

包括肌肉)的重要组成部分。

类固醇还可以阻断皮质醇,皮质醇是

一种信号分子,可以驱动包括蛋白质在内
的物质的分解

最后,它们可能会
促进肌肉而不是脂肪的发育,

并促进我们的新陈代谢,
减少脂肪沉积。

这些特性使类固醇
对治疗许多疾病和伤害很有价值。

它们可以帮助
患有消耗性疾病(

如艾滋病和某些癌症)的人

保持肌肉质量,并帮助烧伤患者
恢复失去的肌肉组织。

因此,如果类固醇被用作药物,

它们在娱乐上使用一定是安全的,
对吧?

好吧,事情没那么简单。

为了产生所需的肌肉生长,

休闲类固醇使用者通常
必须服用比医疗条件规定的剂量高几个数量级的剂量

长期、高剂量类固醇的使用
可能会产生不良

和直接的有害影响——

其中一些取决于
年龄、性别

和潜在健康状况等因素。

我们
不确定所有的风险因素是什么,

但我们确实知道娱乐性类固醇的使用
对青少年来说特别危险。

在青春期,使用类固醇
会促使骨骼

在完成生长之前成熟,
从而导致生长缺陷。

青少年也最容易

受到使用类固醇的有害精神影响的风险。

其中最常见的是
冲动性增加和攻击性增加,

被称为“机器人狂怒”。

高达 60% 的用户会
体验到这些效果。

但也有一些不太常见、

更具破坏性的精神副作用,
如躁狂症甚至精神病。

使用类固醇会损害
包括肝脏和肾脏在内的器官,

并导致
高血压等心血管问题。

虽然这些影响中的部分或全部
可能是可逆的,但

类固醇的使用也可能导致肝癌,
尤其是男性。

尽管娱乐用户服用类固醇是
为了获得合成代谢作用,

但他们也会经历雄激素作用——
通常是不受欢迎的。

这可能意味着女性体毛增加、
阴蒂增大

和声音持续加深。

同时,过量的类
固醇类固醇会导致男性女性化,

因为身体
会将多余的类固醇转化为雌激素。

这会导致乳房发育
和睾丸萎缩。

这些影响并不少见——

大约三分之一的男性类固醇使用者
在某种程度上经历过这些影响。

过量使用类固醇也会降低
男性和女性的生育能力——

通过减少精液中的精子
或导致错过月经和

多囊卵巢综合征等疾病。 如果停止使用类固醇,

所有这些影响都可能是可逆的——
但它们可能不会。

特定的类固醇、使用时间

和其他因素可能
在可逆性中起作用。

最后,越来越多的证据

表明用户容易
产生类固醇依赖。 随着时间的推移,

它们会产生耐受性并需要
越来越大的剂量。

这增加
了有害影响的风险,

所有这些在长期服用较高剂量的情况下变得越来越普遍

尽管如此,

关于
几乎所有危害

在不同使用水平上的普遍性和可逆性的确切信息仍然很少。

我们对
风险因素或暴露水平的了解还不够,

无法明确地说任何娱乐性
类固醇的使用都是无害的。