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New research from scientists at the University of Oslo finds that even brief steroid intake can have permanent effects on the user
New research from scientists at the University of Oslo finds that even brief steroid intake can have permanent effects on the user
Also probably a lot of studies have been done contradicting this finding
Not a specialist so I can't talk about cycles and "responsible" use of roids but a 4 year + ban would be a career killer. If all sports join hands and create a unified way of testing, for all sports equal they would be able to ban the use of roids.
Also probably a lot of studies have been done contradicting this finding
And then some studies contradicted those studies but they were subsequently contradicted by new studies.
No wonder bro science is catching on since scientists can't get their sh*t straight.
The research is conducted on mice, but due to similar biological mechanism in mammals, they anticipate similar results among humans.
What say you Sherdog? If someone is busted for steriods, how long should they be excluded from competition?
http://www.outsideonline.com/news-f...hort-Term-Steroid-Use-Has-Lasting-Effect.html
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Not a specialist so I can't talk about cycles and "responsible" use of roids but a 4 year + ban would be a career killer. If all sports join hands and create a unified way of testing, for all sports equal they would be able to ban the use of roids.
Also probably a lot of studies have been done contradicting this finding
Also probably a lot of studies have been done contradicting this finding
Do you know of any well-conducted contradictory studies, or are you just assuming these exists?And then some studies contradicted those studies but they were subsequently contradicted by new studies.
A four year ban might indeed be a career killer, but it is also equally unfair to allow athletes who use/test positive for steroids to fight again if they are still receiving the benefit of their steroid use. According to the article a 1 or even four year ban might not be sufficient to return the cheating athlete to baseline.
In my opinion, there is no middle ground when it comes to cheating and steroids. If a 4 year or even a 10 year ban is needed, then so be it. If an athlete knowingly took a PED to gain an advantage, they deserve everything that comes their way.
There's a wide variety of steroids which have different results and have different potential types of side effects. That study doesn't state which type(s) of steroids they used on the mice. There's no indication whether they used a variety of steroids or a single one (Single being the most likely scenario, and likely one of the more powerful/dangerous roids like d-bol).
Do you know of any well-conducted contradictory studies, or are you just assuming these exists?
Because while the first one would be interesting, the latter isn't a very useful approach to knowledge.
You need to have a set of rules to back it up then. Nutritional mistakes can be made, 10 years is too high then. They need a whole list of banned substances, nutritional hazards and information along with unified testing for all fighters. When fighters are well informed and know they will get tested, not randomly but systematically you will see a change