| Literature DB >> 26074749 |
Paola Frati1, Francesco P Busardò2, Luigi Cipolloni2, Enrico De Dominicis3, Vittorio Fineschi2.
Abstract
Anabolic androgenic steroids (AASs) represent a large group of synthetic derivatives of testosterone, produced to maximize anabolic effects and minimize the androgenic ones. AAS can be administered orally, parenterally by intramuscular injection and transdermally. Androgens act by binding to the nuclear androgen receptor (AR) in the cytoplasm and then translocate into the nucleus. This binding results in sequential conformational changes of the receptor affecting the interaction between receptor and protein, and receptor and DNA. Skeletal muscle can be considered as the main target tissue for the anabolic effects of AAS, which are mediated by ARs which after exposure to AASs are up-regulated and their number increases with body building. Therefore, AASs determine an increase in muscle size as a consequence of a dose-dependent hypertrophy resulting in an increase of the cross-sectional areas of both type I and type II muscle fibers and myonuclear domains. Moreover, it has been reported that AASs can increase tolerance to exercise by making the muscles more capable to overload therefore shielding them from muscle fiber damage and improving the level of protein synthesis during recovery. Despite some therapeutic use of AASs, there is also wide abuse among athletes especially bodybuilders in order to improve their performances and to increase muscle growth and lean body mass, taking into account the significant anabolic effects of these drugs. The prolonged misuse and abuse of AASs can determine several adverse effects, some of which may be even fatal especially on the cardiovascular system because they may increase the risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD), myocardial infarction, altered serum lipoproteins, and cardiac hypertrophy. The aim of this review is to focus on deaths related to AAS abuse, trying to evaluate the autoptic, histopathological and toxicological findings in order to investigate the pathophysiological mechanism that underlines this type of death, which is still obscure in several aspects. The review of the literature allowed us to identify 19 fatal cases between 1990 and 2012, in which the autopsy excluded in all cases, extracardiac causes of death.Entities:
Keywords: Anabolic Androgenic Steroids (AAS); cardiovascular effects; sudden cardiac death; toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26074749 PMCID: PMC4462039 DOI: 10.2174/1570159X13666141210225414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neuropharmacol ISSN: 1570-159X Impact factor: 7.363
AASs most commonly abused (oral and injectable formulations).
Autoptic, macroscopic and histological findings in 19 AAS related deaths.
| Study | Number of Cases | Age (yrs), Sex, Height and Weight | Heart Dimensions | Cardiac Macroscopic and Histopathological Findings | Other Findings | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weight(g) | LV | RV | IS | |||||
| 1 | 27 M 96.6kg | 530 | 16 | 4 | -- | Marked cardiac hypertrophy with regional myocardial fibrosis. Contraction band necrosis, lymphocytic infiltration | Renal hypertrophy, hepatosplenomegaly | |
| Ferenchick G.S. (1991) [ | 1 | 22 M | --- | --- | --- | --- | Occlusive thrombus in left coronary artery | |
| Kennedy | 2 | 18 M | 410 | 13 | 4 | 17 | Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, disarray, | |
| Dickerman | 1 | 26 M 182cm 136kg | 440 | ---- | ---- | --- | Left ventricular hypertrophy | Bilateral pulmonary embolism from deep venous thrombus of lower extremities |
| Hausmann | 1 | 23 M | 500 | ---- | ---- | --- | Right ventricle dilatation, focal endocardial induration. | Liver parenchyma soft and fragile, cerebral edema, acute vascular congestion in liver spleen and kidney. Capillary hyperemia, platelet aggregation, several fibrinous clots in lungs, liver and kidneys. Nuclear fat free vacuoles, pielosis hepatis. |
| Fineschi | 2 | 32 M 189cm 90kg
| 450
| 14
| 4
| 14
| One grayish zone in internal half of the anterior-lateral wall of the left ventricle which corresponded histologically to a typical infarct necrosis, dead hyperdistended myocardial cells with sarcomeres in registered order. Occasional foci of contraction band necrosis and few fibrotic microfoci in internal portion of left ventricle and interventricular septum. | |
| Weight(g) | LV | RV | IS | |||||
| Di Paolo | 4 | 29 M 190cm 127kg | 490 | 13 | ---- | --- | Small vessels disease, severe interstitial and epicardial fibrosis, hypotrofic myocytes in fibrosis areas, hypetrophy in non fibrosis areas, focal fatty substitution in of the anterior LV wall, mild focal intimal hyperplasia in coronary arteries, myocardial bridge | |
| Fineschi | 2 | 29 M 166 cm 72kg | 380 | ---- | ---- | --- | Foci of contract band necrosis, two microfoci of fibrosis (subendocardial anterior left ventricle, interventricular septum) segmentation of myocardial cells, widening of intercalated discs, bundles of contracted myocardium alterning with bundles of distended myocardium with granular disruption of myocytes. | |
| Thiblin | 1 | 29 F 172 cm 76kg | 331 | ---- | ---- | --- | Isolated flat area of fatty thickening 0.5 x 0.3 cm in proximal part of left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), few small foci of granulation tissue, lymphocytic infiltration around several middle size and small intramural vessels | Adrenal diminished of cortex and medulla. Uterus slightly larger and ovaries slightly smaller. Internal organ abnormally heavy (liver 2298g; kidneys 394g; lungs 1500g) |
| Weight(g) | LV | RV | IS | |||||
| Montisci | 4 | 32 M 180cm 110kg | 450 | 15 | 4 | 16 | Concentric left ventricular hypertrophy. Focal disarray | Multiorgan congestion, |
Toxicological findings and circumstantial data in 19 AAS related deaths.
| Study | Number of Cases | Age (yrs), Sex, Height and Weight | Circumstances | History of Abuse and Route of Administration | Method of Detention | Toxicological Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luke | 1 | 27 M 96.6kg | Collapse during a bench press workout | He had taken anabolic androgenic steroids parenterally for | URINE Nandrolone (19-nor-testosterone) and metabolites | |
| Ferenchick G.S. (1991) [17] | 1 | 22 M | ||||
| Kennedy | 2 | 18 M | cardiac arrests during training sessions | URINE Oxymesterone | ||
| Dickerman | 1 | 26 M 182cm 136kg | Collapse while moving furniture | History of anabolic steroid use | ||
| Hausmann | 1 | 23 M 192cm 94kg | Found dead at home | He had taken anabolic steroid for 9 months. In his apartment were found: | EIA and GC-MS after derivatisation | URINE Mesterolone, Methandienone Testosterone, Nandrolone and Clenbuterol |
| Fineschi | 2 | 32 M 189cm 90kg | Sudden death during a weight lifting | For several months he had been taking testosterone propionate (700mg/wk) and nandrolone (200 mg/wk) parenterally and stanozolol | Urine screening, | URINE 19-nor-androsterone; 19-nor-etiocholanolone, nor-epiandrosterone (metabolites of Nandrolone) 3-idrossi-stanozolol 3-idrossi-17-epistazonozolol (metabolities of Stanozolol) |
| Di Paolo | 4 | 29 M 190cm 127kg | Loss of consciousness during spin bike lesson | History of AAS abuse | Testosterone GC-MS | URINE Negative |
| Fineschi | 2 | 29 M 166 cm 72kg | Collapsed and died after dinner in his apartment | He had been taking testosterone, nandrolone e stanozolol parenterally for several years | Screening, | URINE Nandrolone (non misurable) Stanozolol 43 µg/l |
| Thiblin | 1 | 29 F 172 cm 76kg | Found dead at home | She had used nine different AASs in various combinations during the previous 8 months. | Immunological screening, GC-MS | BLOOD Ephedrine 0.4 µg/l and Norephedrine 0.1 µg per g blood |
| Montisci | 4 | 32 M 180cm 110kg | Found dead in his bed | He had been taking AAS parenterally for 7 years | Screening with | Negative |
Autoptic, macroscopic and histological findings in 19 AAS related deaths.
| Authors | Age (yrs) | Sex | Height (cm) | Weight (kg) | BMI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dickerman | 26 | M | 182 | 136 | 41.1 |
| Fineschi | 32 | M | 189 | 90 | 25.2 |
| 29 | M | 166 | 72 | 26.1 | |
| Di Paolo | 29 | M | 190 | 127 | 35.2 |
| 27 | M | 190 | 100 | 27.7 | |
| 37 | F | 162 | 71 | 27.1 | |
| 31 | M | 175 | 79 | 25.8 | |
| Fineschi | 29 | M | 166 | 72 | 26.1 |
| 30 | M | 178 | 90 | 28.4 | |
| Thiblin | 29 | F | 172 | 76 | 25.7 |
| Montisci | 32 | M | 180 | 110 | 33.9 |
| 31 | M | 172 | 120 | 40.6 | |
| 32 | M | 178 | 94 | 29.7 | |
| 25 | M | 185 | 125 | 36.5 |
BMI = 18.5-24.9, Normal
BMI = 25.0-29.9, Overweight
BMI = 30.0-34.9, Moderately Obese
BMI = 35.0-39.9, Severely Obese
BMI = ≥40, Very Severely Obese