WWE STARS USES STEROIDS

WWE STARS USES STEROIDS 
High death rate lingers behind fun facade of pro wrestling due to intake of steroid
Mike "Road Warrior Hawk" Hegstrand died from an enlarged heart caused by high blood pressure at 46. Mike "Crash Holly" Lockwood died from what a medical examiner ruled a suicide at 32. A lethal combination of painkillers was found in his system.


Former pro wrestler Del Wilkes shed his mask after a career that lasted 12 years.

Mike Lozanski died from what his family says was a lung infection at 35. His relatives are awaiting an autopsy report.

All died in the last five months. All were professional wrestlers with bulging muscles on sculpted bodies. The deaths received little notice beyond obituaries in small newspapers and on wrestling Web sites, typical of the fringe status of the $500 million industry.

Yet their deaths underscore the troubling fact that despite some attempts to clean up an industry sold on size, stamina and theatrics, wrestlers die young at a staggering rate. Since 1997, about 1,000 wrestlers 45 and younger have worked on pro wrestling circuits worldwide, wrestling officials estimate.
examination of medical documents, autopsies and police reports, along with interviews with family members and news accounts, shows that at least 65 wrestlers died in that time, 25 from heart attacks or other coronary problems — an extraordinarily high rate for people that young, medical officials say. Many had enlarged hearts.

Illegal steroid use in professional sports has gained plenty of attention: President Bush in his State of the Union address in January urged athletes and professional sports leagues to stop steroid use, and a federal grand jury has been investigating Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative.

However, it is pro wrestling where the problem appears to be the most pervasive and deadly. In five of the 25 deaths, medical examiners concluded that steroids might have played a role. Excessive steroid use can lead to an enlarged heart. In 12 others, examiners in medical reports cited evidence of use of painkillers, cocaine and other drugs.

The widespread use of drugs and the deaths associated with it raise questions about a largely unregulated business that is watched on TV and in arenas by an estimated 20 million fans a week, including children. Those fans will tune in Sunday for the industry's biggest event, WrestleMania XX.

Fifteen current and former wrestlers interviewed by USA TODAY say they willingly bulked up on anabolic steroids, which they call "juice," to look the part and took pain pills so they could perform four to five nights a week despite injuries. Some admit to use of human-growth hormones, a muscle-building compound even more powerful and dangerous than steroids. And many say they used recreational drugs.

"I experienced what we in the profession call the silent scream" of pain, drugs and loneliness, says wrestling legend "Rowdy" Roddy Piper, 49, who has been in the business more than 30 years. "You're in your hotel room. You're banged up, numb and alone. You don't want to go downstairs to the bar or restaurant. The walls are breathing. You don't want to talk. Panic sets in and you start weeping. It's something all of us go through."

Scott "Raven" Levy, 39, says he used steroids and more than 200 pain pills daily before he kicked the habit a few years ago. "It's part of the job," Levy says. "If you want to be a wrestler, you have to be a big guy, and you have to perform in pain. If you choose to do neither, pick another profession."

The costs are high. Wrestlers have death rates about seven times higher than the general U.S. population, says Keith Pinckard, a medical examiner in Dallas who has followed wrestling fatalities. They are 12 times more likely to die from heart disease than other Americans 25 to 44, he adds. And USA TODAY research shows that wrestlers are about 20 times more likely to die before 45 than are pro football players, another profession that's exceptionally hard on the body.Some wrestlers bet among themselves on who will die next, says Mike Lano, a former wrestling manager and promoter.

Steroids-ingrained culture
Unlike amateur wrestling, which is a competitive sport in high school and college, pro wrestling combines sports, stunts and storytelling. The results are scripted.Pro wrestling does not test for performance-enhancing drugs such as steroids. Nor are they banned by wrestling organizations as they are in pro football, basketball and baseball.That is one reason, wrestlers and industry watchers say, that use of steroids and other drugs in pro wrestling has gone largely unchecked. It also has been ingrained in the culture for decades. Several of wrestling's biggest names, including Hulk Hogan and former Minnesota governor Jesse "The Body" Ventura, years ago acknowledged using bodybuilding drugs.

"There was a joke: If you did not test positive for steroids, you were fired," former wrestler and broadcaster Bruno Sammartino told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in 1991.

"That's a cop-out," says Vince McMahon, head of wrestling's biggest organization, World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). "These guys took steroids because they wanted to.

Del Wilkes, during his stint with the WWF wrestling as "The Patriot."
"Because we are the most visible organization, we get the black eye," adds McMahon, noting that only two of the 65 deceased wrestlers died while working for his company. "It is alarming whenever young people pass away from these insidious causes, but you can't help someone if they don't want to help themselves."

Piper says he lived on a steady diet of muscle builders and painkillers for more than two decades.

The amateur boxer and wrestler left home in Canada at 13. A promoter noticed his "mean streak" and paid him $25 to fight the legendary Larry "The Axe" Hennig in Winnipeg. Piper made a lasting impression with his entrance: Clad in a kilt, he ambled to the ring as his bagpipe band played. Hennig pinned the 15-year-old in 10 seconds, the shortest of Piper's 7,000 matches, but Piper quickly was assigned to shows in Kansas City, Montreal and Texas.Soon Piper had become one of the industry's best-known villains. By the mid-1980s, he was the foil to Hogan, the WWF's golden boy. Wrestling had become a pop-culture phenomenon. Both moonlighted as movie and TV stars, had their own action figures and hobnobbed with celebrities.Even so, Piper never forgot what he heard as a penniless teenager. "A promoter said to me, 'If you die, kid, die in the ring. It's good for business.' "

A 'rock god' lifestyle
Despite, or because of, its testosterone-fueled danger, wrestling attracts mostly young men to a circuslike life built on outsized personalities, "ripped" bodies and death-defying stunts. Newcomers dive headfirst into the rough-and-tumble profession. Current and former wrestlers interviewed say they live on the edge and see few career options. Only a handful of stars have more than a high school education. During a typical 15-minute match, combatants exchange choreographed body slams and punches. Some leap from top ropes onto cement surfaces outside the ring.In more physical "hard-core" matches, wrestlers are smashed through tables, whacked in the head with steel chairs and punctured with barbed wire and tacks. Those antics are not fake. "Wrestling is sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll because we have a rock god kind of thing going," Levy says.
Top performers make more than $1 million annually. Millions of youngsters pine to become the next Mick Foley. He parlayed death-defying stunts — he plunged more than 20 feet from steel cages and was frequently bloodied — into a multimillion-dollar wrestling career. He has since written books on wrestling that made the USA TODAY best-seller list.But for every star, scores of others toil in obscurity at run-down gyms. "Strongman" Johnny Perry, 30, who died of cocaine intoxication in North Carolina in 2002, moonlighted as a repo man. Curtis Parker, 28, accidentally killed in practice in St. Louis in 2002, also worked at a Jack in the Box.Some, like Hegstrand, fade from being headliners at sold-out football stadiums — as he was in the early and mid-1990s — to performing at high school gyms and armories. For nearly two decades, Hegstrand — a hulking figure with wrecking-ball biceps who died in October — freely admitted he indulged in hard living. Though he didn't specify what he took, he made it clear that pro wrestling was fraught with steroids, pain pills and recreational drugs. Then came the sobering news: Years of excess had created a tear in his heart.

"I'd put just about everything (drugs) in me that was humanly possible during my wrestling career," Hegstrand told wrestling radio talk-show host Lano in April 2003.

Hegstrand spent his last few years barnstorming in wrestler-turned-evangelist Ted DiBiase's "Heart of David Ministry" promotion. When he died, traces of marijuana were found in his body, according to his autopsy report.

Others, like Lozanski, wrestle despite serious injuries. More than 18 months after he took a nasty fall that damaged his lungs during a match, Lozanski traversed North America, wrestling for small promotions. He died unexpectedly in his sleep in December.

"That's the nature of the business," says Chris Lozanski, 31, Mike's brother and a former wrestler. "Mike felt he had to keep working. I left the business because I want to see my 11-month-old son grow up," he says.

Since he could walk, Lockwood wanted to be a wrestler. What the 5-foot-8 Lockwood lacked in height, he made up for in determination and tireless training, his mother, Barbara, says. "Everyone laughed when this kid said he would make it, but he did."

Lockwood won more than 20 titles in the WWE and a cult following from 1998 to 2003.

With fame came sacrifices. Lockwood was in constant pain and began using prescription painkillers 18 months ago. He also gained noticeable bulk and was irritable — two signs of steroid use. But when Barbara asked, her son denied using them.

Lockwood was released from his WWE contract after five years on July 1 because it did not have "further plans for his character," the WWE said in a statement.

He was about to move back to California, where he planned to reunite with his high school sweetheart and their 7-year-old daughter. He planned to perform in Japan and train young wrestlers. "He was on his way home, but he didn't make it," Barbara says. Lockwood died in November in Florida. He was 32. A medical examiner ruled it a suicide from an overdose of painkillers. But Barbara thinks it was an accident. "Mike had too much to live for," she says.

Wrestling on trial
When anabolic steroids were cast as a controlled substance in 1991, federal law made purchases and possession of them illegal except for medical purposes. Two grand jury investigations shortly thereafter resulted in admissions of steroid abuse by a handful of big wrestling names and the 1991 conviction of a urologist, George Zahorian of Harrisburg, Pa.He was convicted of 12 counts of selling steroids and painkillers to a body builder and several WWF performers, including Piper (whose real name is Roderick Toombs) and Hogan (Terry Bollea)."The doctor had shopping bags with our names on them that were filled with steroids and prescription drugs," Piper says.Shortly thereafter McMahon was indicted. But he was acquitted of charges of conspiring to distribute steroids to wrestlers.The probes led to stringent drug testing in the WWF, but only for a few years. A few stars were suspended for flunking tests. By late 1996 the program was scrapped because of the expense — and other wrestling organizations didn't test or were lax in enforcement, the WWF said at the time.Jerry McDevitt, the outside legal counsel for McMahon's wrestling organization, contends testing "just doesn't work" because wrestlers can fake urine tests or use designer steroids that are undetectable. "Anybody who wants to beat it can beat it. The only ones who are caught are stupid," he says.
Last year, the WWE — the WWF changed its name to World Wrestling Entertainment after a copyright dispute with the World Wildlife Fund in 2002 — let go star performer Jeff Hardy for refusing to undergo drug rehab treatment. Within weeks, several wrestling organizations lined up to hire him.

Major promoters say the industry has moved on from its "Wild, Wild West" days of the late 1980s.
Young wrestlers take better care of themselves. "The new guys play PlayStation in their hotel rooms," wrestler Sean Waltman, 31, says.

WWE, the largest wrestling organization in North America with 125 wrestlers, says it tests for recreational drugs if there is probable cause. If a wrestler refuses rehab, he is booted. It has cut weekly performances to three or four, down from about five in the mid-1990s. And it has improved training techniques to minimize injuries.

"Steroids and painkillers (aren't) a professional choice but a lifestyle," says WWE wrestler John Cena, 26, who at 6-1 and 240 pounds is the size he was when he played college football. "I've learned to play in pain. If it's a serious enough injury, I take time off."

McMahon says he requires only that his wrestlers are in shape, not that they're "the size of monsters," as many were in the 1960s, '70s and '80s. "We're not looking for bodybuilders," he says.

The No. 2 wrestling employer, NWA-TNA, is considering mandatory drug testing. In November it began offering medical coverage for injuries inside and outside the ring to its 35 contracted wrestlers — the first time a pro wrestling organization has done so. It is considering medical and dental coverage.

But such reforms help only those wrestling for the top two organizations, leaving hundreds of wrestlers largely working under the same conditions as years ago.

Not much has changed on the regulatory front, either. Attempts by wrestlers to unionize have flopped. They have no player associations, as do football, basketball and baseball players.

In most states, oversight of pro wrestling is left to local athletic commissions. They usually have lenient prematch requirements. In New York, for example, performers are subject to little more than a blood-pressure test.

"No one is standing up. Either they don't know what's going on or they're terrified of being blacklisted," says wrestling journalist Dave Meltzer, echoing the sentiment of others.

For now the only one standing up seems to be Piper. He says he forfeited hundreds of thousands of dollars in potential earnings because his outspokenness about rampant steroid and drug use got him fired from the WWE in June.

The WWE denies Piper's allegations. It says the two were unable to negotiate a contract.
Piper doesn't allow any of his four children to watch wrestling — or harbor dreams of being a wrestler. He is sober, living on a 12 1/2-acre spread near Portland, Ore. He is hardly down on his luck. He's been in 26 movies, such as They Live, and TV's The Love Boat and The Mullets since 1978. He has agreed to appear in the movie Fish in a Barrel with Burt Reynolds.Yet he clings to hopes of another big payday in wrestling. He suggests he and McMahon take their feud over Piper's dismissal to the airwaves."It would be great reality TV: two strong personalities going at it over a topical issue," he says, wistfully. "Maybe we could save lives in the process."

NEW STEROID ON THE MARKET: RYMES WITH "LIBIDO"

NEW STEROID ON THE MARKET: RYMES WITH "LIBIDO"
Alright, so there’s a new steroid on the market. I think that the name is supposed to vaguely rhyme with “libido” but I’m not totally sure. It would make sense, since it’s an absurdly long acting version of Testosterone, which at the recommended dose only requires one shot every twelve weeks. At this dose it will keep testosterone levels for a hypogonadal male in the normal range. It will give that hypogonadal (and hypothetical) male that I’m talking about a “new libido” …hence the name “Nebido” for this new drug.

I think.  
A few weeks ago I had publicly predicted that due to steroid the Hormone Replacement Market would continue to grow, and I suspected that prescribing guidelines would probably be relaxed a bit. I still think this is true, and I’m very happy to see new alternatives for Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) being developed and marketed.

However, this isn’t exactly a new steroid (testosterone), but in this form it’s going to be very new to the American HRT market. This drug has been available for a couple of years over in Europe already, released by Bayer Shering Pharma. Studies conducted by that company indicate that blood levels of testosterone provided by this drug will be within the normal range within 3 days of the first steroid injection, will peak within the first week, and will maintain normal levels for 10-12 weeks. In the United States, the pharmaceutical company Indevus (traded as IDEV on the New York Stock Exchange), has licensed the drug for release into the American market. Currently, their other major product in that market is Delatestryl (Testosterone Enanthate).

Nebido is poised to take over a good deal of the American HRT market though, because it only needs to be used once every 3 months (4-5 injections per year). The market here is convenience and comfort for both the doctor and the patient. Doctors typically don’t want their patients to come into their office and walk out with a 10ml vial of testosterone and some needles, and go home to do the injections by themselves. On the other hand, patients don’t want to go to their doctor’s office every week or every other week to receive an injection.

Enter Nebido.  
  • Basically, this drug is a 4 milliliter injection comprised of 1,000mg of testosterone undecanoate, packaged in an ampule (a sterile, single use glass container, which can not be closed once it’s been opened). Testosterone Undecanoate (TU) has been offered before, though, in various forms. Many people will be familiar with it’s most common form, which is an oral form called “Andriol” that contains 40mgs of TU in each capsule.
  • The injectable form of TU was previously on the market in both a multi-testosterone blend as well as alone by a veterinary company called Ft. Dodge. The Ft. Dodge version was available in a 50mg/ml size only, and I have to admit to having tried it out just prior to a Spring Break in Mexico many years ago.
  • As “new” as this drug is, it’s not a very creative effort by the company who brought it to the market. Essentially, they took a very long acting and slow releasing version of testosterone, put a huge dose of it in a container that can’t be resealed (so you have to shoot it all at once), and marketed it as a 12 week supply of HRT. This isn’t groundbreaking stuff, but they’re marketing it very aggressively, doing studies on it, and applying for new drug patents in numerous countries.
  • If money spent on advertising is any indication of how a product will do in the marketplace, this one will be a huge success. It’s also very expensive, depending on how you look at its price breakdown.
  • For 12 weeks of normal testosterone levels, this drug isn’t a bad buy. It’s costing about $300 from legitimate pharmacies, and about half of that on the black market. Again, seen as a twelve week supply of testosterone, $300 is not a bad price.
  • When you consider the fact that what you’re actually getting (physically, in that box of Nebido steroid) is 4mls of testosterone dosed at 250mgs/ml, $300 is an absurd price to be paying. The cost to physically manufacture this product, including everything from the box to the active ingredients is under a dollar.

No, I’m not kidding.  
Yes, this product will cost less than a dollar for its physical production – and the price will be roughly $300 by the time it reaches the pharmacy. Now, given the fact that this steroid company had their stock drop by over a full dollar during a key quarter last year (fiscal 2006), it’s not surprising that they would need to come out with a product which provided them with a huge profit margin in the American HRT market. Remember, the American HRT market is one of the most rapidly expanding markets in the pharmaceutical field.

My advice? 
Buy stock in Indevus but don’t actually buy the new Nebido steroid product. It’s a total rip off, and there’s better buys for the HRT patient.

JOHN CENA'S LEAST FAVORITE LETTERS: CNN OF STEROIDS




JOHNCENA'S LEAST FAVORITE LETTERS: CNN OF STEROIDS
I realize that technically, the title of this article doesn’t make sense on many levels. Firstly, although “CNN” is three letters long, it actually only contains 2 letters (C and N). And I also realize that it’s implausible that John Cena has either favorite or least favorite letters…and further that his two least favorite letters would be those comprising nearly half of his name.

  1. For those of you who don’t know, John Cena is a professional wrestler under contract with the WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment) company, and is one of their biggest stars, having appeared in both the ring as well as starring in his own action movie…prior to that, he was involved in playing football as well as bodybuilding
  2. If you guessed that his physique is very impressive, then you would have guessed correctly. Give yourself a gold star.
  3. If you have further guessed that being a very popular actor and wrestler would make him a good candidate for being interviewed, then give yourself another gold star. And of course, being interviewed and possessing this physique makes him a good person to ask some steroid-related questions.
  4. CNN obviously agrees with my observations, and recently aired an interview with Cena, where they had him in the perfect (and awkward) position to ask him about steroid use.
  5. Likewise, because of my position with Steroid.com, I’m frequently contacted by the mass media for commentary and interviews on various events concerning anabolic steroids in the mass media. In the case of a newsworthy tragedy like the Chris Beniot murder/suicide, I’m often left trying to explain that correlation is not causation. In other words, I’m typically trying to tell the media that yes, it was tragic that Chris Benoit killed himself and his family, but that no, you can not say that steroids were the causative factor. But like I said, I don’t mind doing this-someone has to do it, and I honestly don’t mind explaining things to people who are attempting to write a genuine news story where one exists.
  6. But in the case of the CNN/John Cena interview, I’m left questioning whether CNN is reporting the news or trying to create it.
  7. Before I go any further, I have to admit that I’m not what you would call a fan of professional wrestling at all. I’m not saying that I dislike it per se, only that I don’t pay much attention to it. This wasn’t always the case, but the last time I watched it, I believe one of the performers (who shared my last name) often brought a snake into the ring, another performer seemed to be an Elvis impersonator, one performer was apparently also a “barber” (though he seemed to use some type of gardening shears instead of sizzors), and as I recall, yet another performer often spent a lot of time playing the bag pipes in the ring (when he wasn’t busy being otherwise rowdy).
  8. But with professional wrestling, I always knew what I was getting. There were “good guys” and “bad guys” (the latter called “heels” in wrestling jargon).
  9. CNN should (at least) be held to the same standard that we hold professional wrestling to – and that means, I want to know what I’m getting when I watch CNN. I thought I was getting the news…now I’m not so sure. Granted, the editors of CNN probably aren’t staging limousine explosions, but I still feel like I’ve been deceived.
  10. That’s a bit dramatic, I guess…because I didn’t even watch the original airing of the John Cena interview on CNN…it didn’t even get on my radar until the unedited version already began appearing on the internet and the WWE had already released an official statement.
  11. I’ve listened to both versions of the CNN interview (edited and unedited). Here is what CNN ran as Cena’s response to the “Have you ever used steroids?” question they asked him:
  12. “This is a crazy question and it’s something that’s tough to answer just because of the way society is now. The way people conceive things, because performance-enhancing drugs have got the spotlight and it’s a hot thing to talk about. I can’t tell you that I haven’t, but you’ll never be able to prove that I have.”
  13. And this is the full version of what he actually said:
  14. “Absolutely not.” [Then the CNN reporter then interrupted him and said: “Even back in bodybuilding days? Football days?” at which point, Cena continued:] “This is a crazy question and it’s something that’s tough to answer just because of the way society is now. The way people conceive things, because performance-enhancing drugs,steroids have got the spotlight and it’s a hot thing to talk about. I can’t tell you that I haven’t, but you’ll never be able to prove that I have.”
  15. Clearly, CNN took a very definite denial of ever using steroids from John Cena and edited it to make it seem like an ambiguous admission of using them.
  16. World Wrestling Entertainment then issued a public statement and included both versions of Cena’s comments. At this point, to everyone who cared to read both versions, it became obvious that Cena had been willfully misrepresented by CNN. The WWE (and later CNN) also released a video feed of both versions of the interview (I saw it on YouTube personally).
  17. The WWE has established a very good brand and business model for themselves by creating good-guys and heels, and casting them against each other. It’s a business model that I’m sure ought to be copied by other entertainment companies…I just find myself at a loss for words when I’ve found out that CNN has opted to copy it – and cast itself as the heel.

Cheerleader on Steroids



Cheerleader on Steroids

GIMME-an-S-GIMME-a-T
I knew it was only a matter of time before it happened. Actually, I knew it was happening, but really I’m talking about it becoming a news story. It’s pretty simple math really. Steroids make people gain muscle and lose fat. Everyone knew that high-school athletes and even boys just trying to look a little better for the beach (or umm….gym class, or the Prom, or whatever). And I knew that girls in high school want to look good for those things too. So I assumed that girls in high-school were using anabolic steroids. Really, I didn’t assume – I knew it. I actually have spoken to girls when I was in college who had told me that they had first started using steroids in high-school. Usually they try diet pills, then maybe some clenbuterol steroid and/or thyroid medication. 
 
Brazillians
Brazillians are popular among high school girls. And no, I’m not talking about personal grooming here – I’m talking about a diet pill combination that’s popular in Brazil and has made its way over here to the USA. In New Jersey, where I lived, I was reasonably close Newark where there were a lot of Brazilian and Portuguese immigrants, so the pills (a 3 bottle combo) were pretty rampant. But in other areas of the country, traditional diet pills, and yes, steroids, are far easier to get. For this girl, it was $250 and 48 hours that she spent getting anabolic steroids.
So this morning, a colleague of mine e-mailed me a television story about a girl here in Texas who did a 5 week cycle of Winstrol and gained about 8lbs of muscle. For this girl, it was $250 and 48 hours that she spent getting anabolic steroids. As for availability, she was a cheerleader, and my inside sources tell me that occasionally cheerleaders hang out with football players, and that football players have occasionally been known to use steroids… I don’t know her exact dosage (unfortunately) but it sounds like she was doing 50mgs every other day of the injectable version, based on what she said in the interview. I’m figuring 5 weeks, at a shot every other day, would require something in the price range she was paying (which is exorbitant, but for an end user buying very little, $15/amp of Winstrol is ballpark).

  • That’s a huge dose for a girl, especially one who is as small as she is. And naturally, she didn’t do much (if any) research on the stuff she was taking, and bought it from some guy who she also took instructions on how to use it from.
  • We (musclepumpworld.blogspot.com) clearly do not endorse the use of steroids in minors (ever), so this next statement is going to seem a bit odd, but here it is…
  • She should have done more research before using steroids.
  • I’m not saying she should have used anything at all, but at the very least, she needed to be educated about her decision. We can’t stop everyone in every high-school from doing things we don’t approve of, but she should have at least educated herself on what she was about to INJECT into her body, right?
  • We’ve long given up the idea that teenagers won’t have sex (I think we gave up on it about 2,008 years ago), and recently have instituted strong sex education curriculum in most high schools. We need a strong steroid education curriculum as well, not just a ridiculous chapter in a health book that kids get for one marking period.
  • I’ll phone some high-schools over the next few weeks and give you some insight as to how my idea was received…For more details visit www.steroid.com, www.musclepump.blogspot.com

Get Tested Today! For Less Amount of Steroid Content In your Blood

Get Tested Today! For Less Amount of Steroid Content In your Blood  

* WARNING – steroids and sports supplement ABUSE could cause severe health issues. All users should take adequate tests to monitor for potential problems and out of range values to evaluate and manage their risk while maximizing there gains.

 Our tests are secure, private, and completely confidential. Your results will be reviewed by our medical staff and then sent directly and only to you and there is NO record made to your medical file or to your insurance company. 

STEROIDS IN SPORTS 
 Sports enhancers can include everything from steroids, to supplements and even hormones. When these products get into the body, they affect different organs and body parts. They can improve athletic performance by making muscles work more efficiently, but they can also take a toll on your health by directly effecting different organs, such as the liver, or cause tumors and even cancer if not properly monitored. Steroids affect individual cells and make them create proteins which may cause chemical imbalances. Steroid abusers may develop condition like peliosis hepatis (liver cysts), atherosclerosis (fat deposits in arteries) or other conditions that directly or indirectly could cause organ failure, even in young, fit or athletic people.You definitely want to know when chemical imbalances produce unhealthy out of range values. Early discovery and awareness of anomalies will allow for early consultation and timely intervention. GHI has consolidated many confidential individual tests into panels. Each panel of tests is optimized for producing widest and most valuable results. If you are using, planning on using, or have used steroids or sports enhancement products you need to have certain and specific tests to evaluate and monitor any effect on your body. Steroid abuse can have serious side effects which are described on this site at http://www.steroid.com/side.php. GHI specializes in providing tests designed for early detection of health issues directly related to steroid and sports supplement usage. You should review any out of range values with your health practitioner.

Here are answers to some of our most frequently asked questions.

Additional information can be found at www.ghimedical.com


1. Why should I have my blood tested when I am using steroids?
Serious medical conditions such as liver disease or heart disease can exist without obvious symptoms and the use of steroids or sports enhancement products can highly increase your risk of developing these issues. Detecting these diseases or symptoms as early as possible is absolutely critical to a successful recovery. A simple blood test can provide initial warnings that indicate the effects on your body and what is happening, then assist you (and your physician) in defining and diagnosing the problem. Frequent testing can help you easily monitor your health by establishing a baseline that you can easily track with follow up tests. Proper testing during supplement usage gives you the information to manage your risk of potentially serious health issues.

2. Do I have to see a Doctor to get tested?
You do not need to see a Doctor to order the actual tests. We refer to the same labs as hospitals and physicians use, which are CLIA certified and regulated by all appropriate national and state governmental agencies. Our tests are all reviewed and submitted by our licensed medical staff. Our test preventative health panels have been designed and approved by our Medical Director who is a Board Certified physician to directly help discover issues related to or aggravated by supplement use.
3. I do not feel sick, should I still get tested? 
Diseases can be present without visible or obvious symptoms. Consistent testing could provide for early detection which could possibly save your life.

4. Do I need an appointment?
No, you do not need an appointment. Once you purchase your test you will be directed to go to a lab that is closest to you without having to make an appointment.

5. What are the instructions to be followed before testing?
The test or tests that are in your panel will determine whether there are any special instructions. You will receive this information with your confirmation notification.

6. Should I continue to take my medications before testing?
You should always take any medications that are prescribed by a doctor.

7. Do I need to be fasting?
Yes. It is recommended that you avoid food and liquids for a minimum of 8 to 10 hours before your test, however not all tests require fasting. You should review and follow any specific test requirements before each test.

8. How will I receive my test results? 
After completing your lab process, your test results will be automatically sent to us for review by our medical professionals. Once we review your results you will be notified by email, SMS (short message system), or phone and you will be told to log into our secure patient area to access your test results. You can also choose to receive your results via fax or mail and only you receive the results.
9. Are the test results accurate?
All testing is done by leading national laboratories that are fully accredited and licensed at the state and national level, which allows for the greatest accuracy within the parameters and limitations of current technology.

10. Are the results confidential?
Yes. We respect your privacy and maintain strict confidentiality, our Lab Direct process helps to establish the highest level of confidentially and security. Nobody will have access to your results without your written approval.
11. Will I be able to read and understand the results?
Yes. All test results include normal reference ranges, and will highlight abnormal values and place them in an out of range column. A detailed explanation of tests offered can be viewed on the site and you can contact one of our medical staff if you have any additional questions.

12. What if there are abnormal results?
All abnormal results (out of normal range results) should be reviewed with your primary care physician.

13. Will I be able to consult with a medical professional about the results?
You may contact GHI via email or by phone and speak with one of our licensed medical professionals. We are a non-diagnostic company and all our services are provided as Preventative Health Services. All results should be reviewed by your primary care physician.

14. When will I get my results?
You can expect to review and print your results within 42 to 72 hours after visiting the lab. However; some specialty tests may take longer.

15. Is any of this testing covered by my health Insurance or Medicare?
GHI does not file insurance claims. However some insurance plans have allowances for prevention or wellness benefits. Please contact your insurance provider for this information. GHI will be happy to supply the necessary codes so you can file for reimbursement. Medicare is not accepted.

16. Where do I go to get my blood drawn?
You will be provided a list of the closest patient service centers that are located within your area.

17. What is a patient service center?
This is a Laboratory Draw center where you will go to have a professional phlebotomist draw your blood or take your urine.

18. May I order all tests online?
Yes, all of the testes offered by GHI Lab Direct are available online.

19. Can I have a copy of my results sent directly to my doctor?
GHI provides a convenient and easy to use system allowing you to access your results on our secure website. We encourage you to print out these results and review them with your doctor.

20. Can I get tested today?
You can be tested the same day that you order, providing it is during the Patient Service Center hours of operation, (typically normal working hours).  FOR MORE DETAILS VISIT www.steroid.com, www.musclepumpworld.blogspot.com

Tri-Trenabol Steroid

Tri-Trenabol Steroid

  • (Trenbolone without Esters Shown)(Trenbolone Base + Acetate, Hexahydrobenzylcarbonate, & Enanthate esters)
  • [17beta-Hydroxyestra-4,9,11-trien-3-one]
  • Formula (base): C18 H22 O2
  • Formula, esters
  • Acetate: C2 H4 O2
  • Hexahydrobenzylcarbonate: C2H4O2
  • Enanthate: C7 H12 O
  • Molecular Weight (base): 270.3706
  • Molecular Weight, esters
  • Acetate: 60.0524
  • Hexahydrobenzylcarbonate: 130.1864
  • Enanthate: 130.1864
  • Melting Point (base): 183-186C
  • Manufacturer: British Dragon
  • Effective Dose (Men):50-150mg ED
  • Effective Dose (Women): Not recommended
  • Active life: 8 days
  • Detection Time: up to 5 months
  • Anabolic/Androgenic ratio: 500/500

Tri-Trenabol is British Dragon's trenbolone blend. It's been formulated with three different esters: trenabolone accetate, trenbolone hexahydrobenzylcarbonate, and trenbolone enanthate (for details on each specific trenbolone ester, see: Trenbolone Acetate, Parabolan, and Trenabol 200). The acetate ester allows Tri-Trenabol to display a rapid elevation of blood plasma levels of trenbolone. The other two esters (hexahydryobenzyclcarbonate and enanthate), which release at differing but slower rates, prolong the blood plasma levels of trenbolone.
 
Here's how it breaks down:
  • Trenbolone Acetate: 50mgs
  • Trenbolone Hexahydrobenzylcarbonate: 50mgs
  • Trenbolone Enanthate: 50mgs

Regardless of the ester, trenbolone is a very potent androgen with strong anabolic activity. It can be used for mass development or it can be used for cutting (which is more common) and is well suited for either. Due to its progestenal nature, testosterone must always be stacked with it, although trenbolone does not convert to estrogen. Tri-Trenabol would probably be used for cutting, and one would probably stack it with an anabolic such as Winstrol or Primobolan (and testosterone, as previously discussed). Bulking with this product is also highly possible, and with the addition of compounds like Dianabol and Testosterone, quality muscle mass would be quickly accrued. for more details visit www.musclepumpworld.blogspot.com

Different Types Of Steroids In Body Building

Different Types Of Steroids In Body Building

Different types of steroids are being used by many people in body building.

Even athletes participating in many different types of sports have been using steriods to improve performance and build muscle for over 90 years. The non-medical use of different types of steroids is widespread among athletes engaged in power sports such as power-lifting, body building, baseball, football and rugby. The popularity stems from their perceived contribution to increase muscle bulk and strength and to improve competitiveness. There are more than one million estimated users of different types of steroids in the United States alone. Approximately 2% of athletes between the ages of 10 and 14, and 5% to 10% of high school athletes have used many types of steroids, even though their use is prohibited. In addition, approximately 5% of college athletes currently use different types of steroids. Because of legal and administrative issues it is difficult to estimate the number of Olympic and professional athletes currently using the drugs. However, a number of Olympic Gold Medalists have had their medals withdrawn for using different types of steroids.  
The use of steroids that people believe are safe steriods for improved competitiveness violates ethical principles and is strictly prohibited by the military services as well as the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) and other national sports governing bodies. Avoid the many different types of steroids and click here to take a sound approach to body building and athletic success.
 
"What Are Steroids & How Do They Work?"  
The answer to the question - What are steriods - is simple. They are synthetic derivatives of the hormone testosterone, which is responsible for the development of male characteristics. The pituitary gland in the brain controls the production of testosterone in the male testes. Testosterone has both androgenic (masculinizing effects) and anabolic (tissue-building) properties. The main functions of testosterone in an adult are to:  
  • Promote secondary male sex characteristics, such as hair patterns and deepening of voice
  • Increase muscle mass
  • Initiate and maintain sperm production

Different anabolic steroids were developed by structurally altering testosterone to reduce its breakdown, and to maximize its tissue-building (anabolic) effects. The more common different types of steroids are listed below. This class of steroids was first used therapeutically to treat certain disorders of the blood, bone mass deterioration, protein wasting states, and as a replacement therapy for male children deficient in testosterone. Anabolic steroids used in body building and sports should not be confused with corticosteroids which act as anti-inflammatory agents and are used to treat a variety of medical conditions.

Please be aware that no steroids are safe steroids.

Many Types Of Steroids Used In Body Building & Sports
 
  • Generic Name: Boldenone - Street Name: Vebonol
  • Generic Name: Clostebol - Street Name: Steranobol
  • Generic Name: DehydroehIarmethyItestosterone - Street Name: Turnibol
  • Generic Name: Fluoxymesterone - Street Name: Android F, Halotestin, Ora-testryl
  • Generic Name: Mesterolone - Street Name: Androviron, Proviron
  • Generic Name: Metandienone - Street Name: Danabol, Dianabol
  • Generic Name: Metenolone - Street Name: Primoboian, Primonabol-Depot
  • Generic Name: Methandrostenolone - Street Name: Dianabol
  • Generic Name: MethyItestosterone - Street Name: Android, Estratest, Methartdren
  • Generic Name: Nandrolone - Street Name: Durabolin, Deca-Durabolin
  • Generic Name: Norethandrolone - Street Name: Nilevar
  • Generic Name: Oxandrolone - Street Name: Anavar
  • Generic Name: Oxymesterone - Street Name: Oranabol, Theranabol
  • Generic Name: Oxymetholone - Street Name: Anadrol, Nilevar, Anapoton 50
  • Generic Name: Stonozolol - Street Name: Winstrol, Stroma
  • Generic Name: Testosterone - Street Name: Malogen, Malogex, Delatestryl
  • Generic Name: Human Growth Hormone - Street Name: Human Growth Hormone

Here we will review & explain some more types of steroids.


Growth Hormone


Different steroids such as Human growth hormone (hGH) is a hormone produced in the brain, The hormone is commonly used to increase the height of very short children and until recently to increase strength in the elderly. Athletes have been known to use many types of steroids such as hGH at a black market cost of about $2,000 for an 8-week course. The known, effects of many types of steroids such as hGH in, the athlete are shown below.

Physiologic Effects of Growth Hormone

  • Increases muscle mass
  • Increases fat breakdown for energy
  • Conserves blood glucose and muscle glycogen storage
  • Increases height in the skeletally immature individual
  • Increases size of hands, feet, and jaw
  • Enhances healing of musculoskeletal injuries

Unfortunately, the increase in muscle mass does not increase muscle strength as much as strength training. No increase in height has been seen in a fully grown person, however, different types of steroids such as hGH may increase hand, foot, jaw and body size.

Not exactly something you may want.

There is little known about the adverse effects of many different anabolic steroids such as hGH use in the normal body building athlete, but the skeletal muscle growth may be abnormal and therefore the muscles may be weak. Given that steroids used in body building such as hGH use is banned by the IOC, NFL, NCAA and most sports governing bodies, it should not be used.

Clenbuterol

Clenbuterol, like many other types of steroids is a drug used by veterinarians to increase muscle mass in livestock, is being used by many in body building. However, like many different steroids used in body building increases in muscle strength have not been shown in humans. In addition, there are numerous adverse side effects, including rapid heart rate, muscle tremors, headaches, nausea, dizziness, fever and chills. Although technically classified as a B2-agonist, it is officially considered an anabolic agent by the USOC, and is thus on their list of prohibited different types of steroids.

Erythropoietin

Steroids like Erythropoietin (EPO) are used by endurance athletes, but not so much in body building, to improve performance. One type of EPO, called rEPO or rhEPO, is used to treat a number of blood diseases. Athletes use steroids like rEPO because it increases the red blood cell count by stimulating red blood cell production and speeding red blood cell release from the bone marrow to the blood stream. The rod blood cells carry oxygen to the muscles, so more red cells mean more oxygen. The effects of many steroids like rEPO are actually similar to those seen in any athlete who trains at altitude. In order for these changes to occur, the athlete must have an adequate iron intake and maintain an aerobic training schedule. As with many types of steroids, the increase in red blood cell, production can cause a number of significant adverse effects. The types of steroids like this can cause high blood pressure, a flu-like syndrome, and a sluggish blood flow. Blood flow becomes sluggish when the percentage of red blood cells reaches 55%. Normal ranges are 4096 to 48% in men and 36% to 45% in women. Sluggish blood flow causes a variety of complaints, including headache, dizziness, ringing in the ears, visual changes, and chest pain.  Other possible complications from different types of steroids like this are heart attack, seizure, or stroke due to a blockage of blood flow. Up to 18 deaths due to different types of steroids like rEPO have been reported in cyclists. The use of blood doping or different types of steroids like rEPO is prohibited by all sport governing bodies.


"Summary Of The Many Types Of Steroids Used In Body Building & Other Sports"

In conclusion, none of the different types of steroids discussed above offer any guarantee that your performance will improve. However, there is a good chance you could compromise your health & future by using even just one of the different types of steroids available in body building. The benefits of different types of steroids are limited and the potential harmful effects of different types of steroids are clear. Our advice is to keep up with your training according to the methods described in other body building sections on this site or by clicking here for a recommended resource.

WHAT ARE ANABOLIC STEROIDS?

 WHAT ARE ANABOLIC STEROIDS?

Anabolic steroids are derivatives of testosterone (male sex hormone.) Testosterone is a hormone secreted by the testes of man and animals. Its anabolic effect is the product of nitrogen retention by the muscle tissue. Testosterone is converted by a reductase to dihydrotestosterone, which increases the synthesis of RNA (ribonucleic acid) and protein.

Bodybuilding and Fitness in anabolic steroid used for strength and increase muscle mass.

HAT ARE THE SIDE EFFECTS THAT MAY OCCUR?




Steroids administered in high doses to produce muscle growth, may have different side effects that vary by steroid use.
Androgenicity

Some, like testosterone are androgenic, meaning that emphasizes male secondary sexual characteristics. Others, such as stanozolol are weakly androgenic. The man can result in increased sexual arousal during the administration of an androgenic steroid (eg testosterone) and decreased sexual desire after the end of the cycle.In women can cause masculinization: hair growth, hair loss, hoarse voice, amenorrhea, dermatology.These problems may occur with the administration of high doses of androgenic steroids (testosterone, Anadrol, etc.).
Gynecomastia

Androgenic steroids (testosterone, Oxymetholone, etc.), After a while management, undergo a process of "flavoring", by which they become estrogens (female hormones). When you get these estrogens in the body can cause gynecomastia, a hypertrophy of breast tissue, or whether the man is an inflammation or swelling of the breasts, often accompanied by pain. No way to prevent and treat it with anti-estrogen
Impotence

Sexual impotence can occur in humans at the end of a cycle with a very androgenic steroid like testosterone. The reason is that by managing for a time a decrease testicular androgen secretion of testosterone.
When performing a cycle with a not very androgenic steroid like Decadurabolin, I noticed that impotence can occur during the course of the cycle rather than be the end.

The theme of impotence can be prevented and solved using a stimulant of the secretion of testosterone by the body, such as Endocorion. The Viagra can help.
Liver damage

Steroids, especially those supplied by mouth, can cause liver damage. It is particularly toxic to the liver Anadrol.

Elevated cholesterol

The increase in cholesterol that can occur in some people with the use of steroids is not the cause of heart disease as shown by studies cited by William D. Brink in his book "Anabolic Enhancing the Environment." The cause of coronary heart disease is the oxidation of cholesterol to become "plate" which is what clogs the arteries. Studies have shown that consumption of antioxidants reduces the risk of heart disease dramatically.
Baldness

Problems may include loss of hair.
Other problems


Have reported other problems such as hypertension, psychological dependence, an enlarged prostate, acne, múculares and tendon injuries, etc. It's also common to talk about the "wrath of steroids, but their existence is unproven, since cases in which allegedly appeared, was in individuals who were already violent before starting consumption.

DEADLY ARE ANABOLIC STEROIDS?


After talking about the side effects of steroids and to the frequent comments about their lethality, it is desirable to make the following considerations: The cases of alleged killings by steroids, of which the best known are those of Mohamed Benaniza and Andreas Munzer "were due to steroids? Or perhaps other substances used in competitions such as diuretics for example? As such the amount of bodybuilders who use them would not be very frequent deaths of these? As well: the old bodybuilders would they not be dying in numbers? The undesirable effects of the same and serious health problems in which there is risk to life has been enormously exaggerated. Side effects such as temporary impotence, gynecomastia, etc.. are far from being threatening, and can counteract with appropriate drugs. The really risky drugs for life are: insulin, which can cause hypoglycemia followed by coma and death, and some diuretics such as furosemide, which can also lead to dehydration, an excessive fall in blood potassium affect cardiac function and can produce death.