Feb. 3, 2008

The Truth About Steroids And Sports

How Performance-Enhancing Drugs Went Mainstream

(CBS)  Steroids have been much in the news these days. And some of the best-known athletes have been or are about to be questioned about their alleged use of the drugs. So what is behind what seems the sports scandal of the decade? Our Sunday Morning Cover Story is reported now by Dr. Sanjay Gupta of CNN.


So we all agree that steroids are bad, right? They've brought suspicion and shame.

Congress has just opened a new round of hearings into the anabolic steroids debate.

Former Yankees second baseman Chuck Knoblauch testified on Friday, "I want baseball to be clean."

Pitcher Roger Clemens is set to appear on Tuesday.

They're among a number of players facing questions over former Senator George Mitchell's recent report linking 89 major leaguers to performance-enhancing drugs.

So it makes you wonder: If steroids are such a problem, why do athletes continue to take them? Why are they are a problem even among high school athletes? Why are some entertainers said to be using them?

It's because, whatever you think, anabolic steroids work.

Barry Tyson uses steroids. But he's someone you won’t see in the headlines. His usage is legit. Tyson takes steroids to help fight off infections from HIV.

How quickly did he notice a change? "I mean, did you, take this stuff at night and then in the morning say, 'Wow, something's already different'?" Gupta asked.

"Well, I mean, within a couple a days I noticed a change," Tyson said. "I noticed a change in my energy level. I noticed a change in my appetite. I noticed a change in how much I could push at the gym."

And how crucial were steroids in his recovery?

"It was very important especially because it's putting on that muscle that helps fight infection," Tyson said.

To understand anabolic steroids, let's take a look back: First developed in the 1930s, they're synthesized from the male hormone testosterone. They've been used to treat wasting conditions, like HIV-AIDS and cancer. They stimulate bone growth and appetite. But along the way, these useful drugs got hijacked.

"Like many things, the steroids were developed for a purpose, which is to treat people who had deficiency," said Dr. Jeffrey Lennox, an HIV-AIDS specialist at Emory University in Atlanta.

"And when people saw how much better people felt, that they put on muscle mass, that they got stronger because we were replacing the male hormones, athletes started to add additional hormones on top of their natural production and noticed increases in strength," Lennox said. "And, you know, it sort of ballooned from there."

In his book "Steroid Nation," Shaun Assael tells how steroids broke into the mainstream - from the Olympics, to the pros, to the gym around the corner.

"In the gyms of Venice Beach in the '70s, you saw bodybuilders - I called them in the book 'Arnold-istas,' people who are trying to follow Arnold Schwarzenegger,'" Assael said. "And they really tried to sort of create a religion around steroids."

Schwarzenegger, by the way, has admitted he used steroids back then.

In the 1980s, an infamous guide to the medication, the "Underground Steroid Handbook For Men And Women," was making the rounds.

"What they wrote about was every drug, what they could do for you, and where you could get it," Assael said. "And they advised the bodybuilders to go to 'friendly' doctors, young guys who kind of liked the gyms, too."

To this day, there's a thriving illicit trade in steroids, even though they're only legal with a prescription. And steroids have been joined by other performance-enhancing drugs, such as EPO, which increases your red blood cell count.

Then there's human growth hormone (HGH), derived from the pituitary gland.

They can all increase your strength, and endurance.

Still, they WON'T make you an instant super-athlete.

When it comes to being stronger, when it comes to being faster, when it comes to having better coordination, do steroids help with those things as well? No, said Assael.

"They're not going to help with your coordination," he told Gupta. "They're not going to help with your eyesight. They're not going to help you hit the ball. They'll help you hit the ball a little farther.

Of course, a lot of folks call that cheating.

Christopher Bell, a long-time weightlifter, has spent a lot of time thinking about the lure of steroids and sports ethics. He's also a filmmaker, and has just made a documentary called "Bigger Stronger Faster."

"When I was a kid, I was really into larger than life heroes: guys like Arnold, Hulk Hogan, Sylvester Stallone," Bell said.

In his film, he interviewed Ben Johnson, the Canadian sprinter who was stripped of his Olympic gold medal in 1988 after failing a steroids test.
Chris Bell: Were you taking any sort of drugs for that race?
Ben Johnson: Not what they find me with, no.
Bell: But you were taking other stuff?
Johnson: Other stuff, yeah.
Bell: But isn't that still cheating?
Johnson: Still cheating, yeah, like everybody else.
Bell: So that's how you justify it, like everybody's cheating?
Johnson: Yes.
But mostly Bell's documentary focuses on his two brothers. They both took steroids to help them in the gym and on the football field.

His brother Mark said, "In my mind there's no excuse for not being as strong as you can possibly be. You do what you gotta do to win."

"In 2004 Joe Biden was in front of Congress," recalled Christopher Bell, "and he was hitting his hands on the table, saying "there's something simply un-American about this." And when we started the film, I started thinking, is it really un-American to use steroids? Are me and my brothers un-American? Or is there nothing more American than doing whatever it takes to be the best, especially when you live in a culture that preaches to win at all costs?"

For himself, Christopher Bell says it was a decision he agonized over. "I tried steroids," he said. "But I felt so guilty I had to stop."

But Dr. Jeffrey Lennox says steroids will do more than just make you feel guilty: "Now the downside, obviously, is that there are the side effects. Your testes will shrink if you get too much. Your blood can become more coagulable or more likely to clot. And there's always the risk of, you know, heart weakening and liver tumors."

The sports world was stunned over the death of Lyle Alzado, the fearsome football star of the 1970s and '80s. He believed that heavy steroid use led to the brain tumor that killed him. There was no medical evidence to back that up.

There IS evidence that steroids can stunt the growth of teenagers, which is one reason why there's so much concern over steroid use by high school athletes.

A recent survey of high school seniors found that, while a small number admitted to using steroids, a much larger number - about 40-percent - said steroids are 'fairly easy' or 'very easy' to get.

Just this past month, Illinois said it will begin to test high school athletes for steroids, joining Texas, New Jersey and Florida.

So what to do about this good drug gone bad?

A lot of folks feel that if anything's going to turn steroids back into drugs that help sick people, instead of helping athletes get an extra edge, it might not be testing, or Congress, or warnings about side effects.

Shaun Assael believes it might come down to a simple question: "You as the athlete have in your mind how you want to be remembered. That's why you put yourself through such excruciating pain day in and day out to get there. And if that legacy is on the line, if the political winds turn, and suddenly anybody associated with these things are looked at as bad people, in an era of cheating, that's the deterrent."

But will it ever be that simple? We posed the question to Dr. Lennox. In his answer we found the promise, and the curse, of steroids:

"It's a difficult decision. I mean, I'm a physician. You know, if I was 30 years younger and I was being recruited to be in the major leagues and they said, 'You know, you just don't have the strength; if you could hit it ten more yards, we'd take you to the majors,' I might make a very different decision.

"I might say, "Well, I'm gonna use the steroids and just hope I don't get caught."

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Video and Galleries from Sunday Morning

Add a Comment
by hypnotoad72 February 3, 2008 12:01 PM PST
I recall when Knoblauch was on the MN Twins... never cared for him, but he''s right. The sport should be clean.

How did Barry get AIDS? I had no idea bigger muscles fought infections. I thought white blood cells did that...

Sanjay Gupta is as credible as a guppy.

Okay, where can I get steroids? I''m disease free and am a usually decent person. Oh, that means I''m already disqualified. Okey dokey! I''ll just bribe Britney to get me some... She loves showing off which muscles are strong... :) Or :(, it depends on what she''s showing on any given day...
Reply to this comment
by creativeplan February 3, 2008 12:01 PM PST
I have been a loyal fan of Sunday Morning for MANY years, and have recommended your show to others, for its elegant reporting style, beauty and truth. However, this morning, the report on steroid use has a huge error - the pictures of steroid bottles showed Cyanocobalamin (simple injectable B12,) - an energy-producing vitamin. B12 is key to providing energy for those of us with Thalassemia (minor or major), aka Cooleys Anemia, or Mediterranean anemia. It is also very effective in soothing the painful effects of shingles.
I saw the photo twice - once in the lead-in, and again during the story. I have also seen it in the photographs of the late Anna Nicole''s refrigerator/medicine chest - but I don''t know which station broadcasted this. Regardless - please address and fix this mis-information - the last thing we need is today is unnecessary fear. In the meantime, keep up the great work - Sunday Morning is as welcome as a blazing, wondrous sunrise. Have a healthy and happy new year! Kind regards,
Barbara Reilley
creativeplane1@yahoo.com
Reply to this comment
by rudy654-2009 February 3, 2008 2:16 PM PST
Isn''t interesting that steroids don''t improve athletic skills, yet their use is considered cheating? I don''t advocate the use of them, but goodness, it seems a lot about nothing. How interesting that this is safe territory for congress to focus on.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 February 3, 2008 10:45 PM PST
"So we all agree that steroids are bad, right?"

No, obviously we all don''t agree. I have no need for them, as my life as a producer, composer and musician doesn''t require them, but I am fed up with self appointed "ethical" and "moral" hypocrites dictating what is good and what isn''t.

If steroids are harmful, they only harm the one taking them, and that person is fully aware of the sacrifice they are making to achieve their goal.

If a baseball player takes steroids, so what? The only harm they do to others is to alter the betting odds for that other healthy American sport called gambling, and the suckers who gamble on what we all know is fixed, deserve to lose their hard earned cash.
Reply to this comment
by gce65 February 4, 2008 5:07 AM PST
Come on kids! The truth is you''ll be stronger and make more MONEY in your sport! And you probably won''t get caught because management is in on the deal; they just want to make more money from the public who comes to see you too. Come on...everybody does it.
Reply to this comment
by gce65 February 4, 2008 5:09 AM PST
owlcroft:
You ARE a spammer if you hit the publish button that often with the same message.
Reply to this comment
by thee0racle February 4, 2008 6:17 AM PST
perhaps Congress should have hearings on something important to the nation, like energy costs and Bushco war crimes
Reply to this comment
by jeff-199 February 4, 2008 7:30 AM PST
"If steroids are harmful, they only harm the one taking them, and that person is fully aware of the sacrifice they are making to achieve their goal."

Steroid use goes far beyond harming only the users in that to compete with steroid users you have to be a steroid user. Look at the recent explosion in steroid use among professional cyclists. The effects of EPO, blood doping, etc. in an event as grueling as the Tour de France afford the user an incredible, unfair advantage. This advantage ups the pressure on everyone in the sport to compromise themselves just to be competitive.
Reply to this comment
by theresaf3 February 4, 2008 5:12 PM PST
WHERE CAN I SEE THE MOVIE BIGGER, STRONGER, FASTER spoken about in the steroid piece on Sunday morning. Director Christopher Bell
Reply to this comment
  • MOST POPULAR
  • Viewed
  • Commented
Latest News
Featured Blogs