Anabolic steroids and cardiovascular effects
Cardiovascular:
- effects of anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS) include:
- anecdotal reports have linked AAS to myocardial infarction and sudden death
- these cases have generally occurred in young men (using high doses of multiple androgens) without any previous cardiac history and normal coronary arteries on autopsy. A common autopsy finding are the hypercontracted, deeply eosinophilic cardiac myocytes with disruption of myofibrillar structure
- these cases have generally occurred in young men (using high doses of multiple androgens) without any previous cardiac history and normal coronary arteries on autopsy. A common autopsy finding are the hypercontracted, deeply eosinophilic cardiac myocytes with disruption of myofibrillar structure
- use of AAS has also been associated with septal and left ventricular hypertrophy and cardiac arrhythmias
- both systolic and diastolic dysfunction that was directly related to the dose and duration of AAS use
- use of AAS, not unexpectedly, has been associated with polycythemia and adverse changes in clotting factors
- one of the most commonly seen undesirable effects of androgens, particularly nonaromatizable androgens, is a significant decrease in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol
- nonaromatizable androgens like stanozolol can decrease plasma high-density lipoprotein by more than 30%
- decline is significantly less with use of aromatizable androgens such as testosterone
- AAS also increase hepatic lipase activity, thereby contributing to dyslipidemia. All these pathways by which AAS influence cardiovascular risk make cardiovascular disease a serious consequence of AAS
- anecdotal reports have linked AAS to myocardial infarction and sudden death
Reference:
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