Performance-Enhancing Drugs and Sports
In the year 1967, a Dr. Gabe Mirkin asked 100 athletes the following: "If I could give you a pill that would make you an Olympic champion -- and also kill you in a year -- would you take it?" (Freudenrich 1). Of the 100 people questioned more than half responded that they would indeed take the pill if given the opportunity despite the risks involved. The issue has only gotten worse in the years that have followed. In the world of sports, people are judged little by how hard they work or how many years they might put into training their bodies for peak physical performance. Instead, all that matters to most people involved in either professional or amateur sports is the end result. The more scores on the board, the better the athlete is considered. This modern age is an extremely competitive one and athletes are not only judged based on how they compare to one another, but also how they compare to the past. In order to overcome the competition, both past and present, athletes have frequently taken to preparatory methods which go far beyond exercise and conditioning. Professional and amateur athletes inject or imbibe their talent if they cannot go about it naturally which had created a severe disadvantage to those who do not break the rules and use steroids to improve their athletic prowess. These athletes pump their way into the record books through illegal and immoral chemical consumption. Steroid use of any kind by athletes has become rampant and should be officially banned by all sporting authorities on all of the professional, amateur, and/or academic levels.
There are legitimate reasons for nearly all medications and drugs, or at least there was a legitimate use at one time. What are often referred to as performance-enhancing drugs were at one time just medical treatments and for many patients they still are used in order to treat medical conditions. Their uses relating to professional sports was tangential to their intended purposes. Steroids have been used legally and honestly for many medical conditions including asthma, cancer, and in AIDS patients. They have also been used for therapeutic means such as in inducement of bone growth, stimulation of appetite in cancer and AIDs patients, and in inducement of male puberty should it be physically retarded in a certain patient. However, for every correct and medically sound reason for using a particular medication, there will always be those who can find improper reasons to inject and abuse such materials as is the case with steroids.
The use of drugs in the world of sports is often colloquially known as "doping." Anabolic steroids are used by athletes to increase their muscle mass which in turn increases their physical strength. An additional benefit to athletes is that steroids tend to reduce the muscle damage that occurs during a training session or game, and if a person is injured during the course of either of these types of activities, steroids lessen the time that it takes for the athlete to heal from their injuries. Bones can be strengthened through steroid use as well as increasing oxygen delivery to tissues which are heavily exercised also increasing the speed of healing and increasing their ability to perform (Freudenrich 2). One of the side effects of steroid use is an aggressive attitude which many athletes believe aids their performance on the field (Mayo). This perceived benefit of steroid usage supposedly leads to stronger defense and a stronger ability to fight against the opponent. Other reasons for athletic drug use include relaxation, reduction of body weight in the case of gymnasts or ballerinas, or to hide the use of the other drugs or narcotics.
Some of the most frequently used performance-enhancing drugs include: anabolic steroids, androstenedione, human growth hormone, erthyropoietin, diuretics, creatine, and chemical stimulants (Mayo). These are the most common performance-enhancing drugs because they can be obtained easily and can be used as injectables, as pills, or as a topical cream. Androstenedione is also called androgenic steroid because it affects gender of the individual; those who take them are responsible for increasing male traits such as growing facial hair or deepening the voice. Women who use androstenedione materials tend to have issues with facial hair and have a more masculine voice because of the increase of testosterone in the body. Many females use this in sports such as body building, testosterone decreasing menstrual cycles and making the symptoms less severe thus preventing impediment to their training. A new branch of designer steroid has...
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