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View Full Version : Steroid abuse 'off the scale' as 'bigorexia' afflicts increasing number of men



PAiN
04-23-2014, 04:22 PM
Steroid abuse 'off the scale' as 'bigorexia' afflicts increasing number of men





Police made 1,488 seizures of steroids across the region last year - almost double the previous year’s total of 799



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Steroid abuse on the increase in Manchester A health expert has warned of an off-the-scale demand for ‘bodybuilder drugs’ in Greater Manchester.
Police made 1,488 seizures of steroids across the region last year - almost double the previous year’s total of 799.

So-called ‘needle shots’ of steroids can cost as little as £2. And their use is now said to extend well beyond bodybuilders, with police officers, security guards, and even builders turning to the drugs. Around 600 steroid users are on the books at the NHS-run Pump Clinic in Ancoats, which provides advice and runs a needle service to make sure the drug is used safely.

Colin Tyrie, public health advisor at Manchester Mental Health NHS Trust, said the ‘trickle’ of people coming to the clinic had now become ‘quite a torrent’ because of the growing pressure on young men to look good. And, he says, he fears the new markets for steroids could create health problems.

He told the M.E.N: “When they were really easily accessible but with a smaller demand, we tended not to get a lot of problems with them.

“The people who were using them knew a bit more about it and they researched them to an extent and they were generally athletes or body builders.

“Now it’s gone off the scale with people doing it for emerging reasons. And they might be less inclined to do the research required.”

The clinic is now seeing athletes like rugby players and cyclists, as well as professionals who see being big as advantage. Even young actors who have to change shape for a new role have visited the clinic.

Experts say men drawn to steroid use can be suffering from ‘Adonis body syndrome’ or ‘bigorexia’.

Side-effects like acne, hair-loss and shrunken testicles are associated with the drug, as well as problems with fertility, the liver and heart.

In 2012, the MEN reported how a fitness fanatic who planned to become a doctor collapsed and died after taking anabolic steroids.

Mohammed Belkhair, 19, suffered a deadly reaction to the performance-enhancing drugs which he ordered from an internet site and took secretly.


http://i4.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/incoming/article7020159.ece/alternates/s615b/JS35093760.jpg
Increasing numbers of bodybuilders suffering from 'bigorexia' The 'ticking time bomb' of steroid abuse


The Pump Clinic in Ancoats warns people not to take steroids - but still have 600 users on their books.

Staff warn them about the side effects of steroids as well as clean needles but it’s not what most of them want to hear.

So they’re also told, if they insist on using steroids, to do so carefully and they’re given advice and clean syringes. They aren’t given steroids.

Newcomers to the drug often take it in the form of a pill whose affect is broken down by the liver but then they graduate to injecting steroids because it’s more potent although more risky, especially if sharing needles. They open themselves to the possibility of contracting HIV and Hepatitis B and C.

Apart from helping the increasing number of young men taking steroids, the clinic also works to gain the confidence of often mistrusting body-builders and gather information on how the drug affects them over the next few years.

Colin Tyrie, public health advisor at Manchester Mental Health NHS Trust, said: “The male role in society has become quite damaged. It’s not sure what it is any more. Men don’t have an identity like our fathers did so there’s this sense we’re trying to fulfil that.

“There’s quite a strong prevalence of this amongst white working class males. It’s a quick way to get prestige to say ‘yes I’m a big bloke’ and all the associations that go with that.”

Despite the associated risks of taking steroids, Mr Tyrie said further study was needed to understand the long-term affects.

He said: “If there is a ticking health time-bomb, we’re pushing users away by criminalising them more and more. That’s what’s happened with drugs in the past.”

It's legal to possess steoids but unlawful to trade them

It’s legal to possess anabolic steroids but not to trade in them.

Only pharmacists can sell the Class C drug to someone with doctor’s prescription.

Importing and exporting the drug is lawful as long as it’s to enable personal use and is done in person, and not via the post.

Possession of the drug or importing it with intention of supplying it (which includes giving them to friends) is illegal and could lead to 14 years in prison and an unlimited fine.

Steroids mimic hormones like testosterone which regulate how the body develops.

Clark Kent
04-23-2014, 10:23 PM
Great read Pain! Thanks for the post. That last paragraph is very interesting!

xmuscle
04-23-2014, 11:29 PM
even in young kids there is an increase in use because thats all they talk about on espn mlb,nfl players using steroids..now all these kids in high school want to b like them.

TheTrain
04-24-2014, 09:01 AM
I think this man needs to coime to the states...he clearly is intelligent and has a realistic grasp on what criminalizing them more and more does. Maybe I should move to the UK?!? lol

toppjimie
04-24-2014, 02:50 PM
Damn,in the town of Manchester,the police made 1,488 seizues of anabolic steroids.Is every male in the town on roids? It's a good idea to open a clinic to "teach" proper use.That's because you have IDIOTS like the 19 yr old Fitness Fanatic(probably a meso member),that died from some shit he bought online.Those "needle-shots" sound like a pre-filled syringe that are sold in the locker room.I would never buy something like that,how stupid!

mauz
04-25-2014, 07:46 AM
sounds like the UK isn't a bad place to be juicing!