Steroids quickly turning ripped in R.I.P.
Doug Robinson
If that doesn't raise a few red flags in your mind, then you've already flunked your first steroid test. Rutstein, after failing to get the desired results simply by pumping iron, turned to anabolic steroids.
Three and a half years later after "gushing" noses bleeds and episodes of 'roid rage, after getting hauled away to an asylum, after stealing from his parents to support his habit, after repeated attempts to quit he quit for good. He spent a year lying in bed, depressed. In the end it was exercise again that got him moving again, this time without the drugs.
Rutstein, now 40, has looked on with dismay as America has slowly awakened Bud Selig-like to an underrated drug problem among its youth. Last year he wrote a book on his own steroid experience "Steroid Deceit" as a warning to youths and their parents.
"It's such an addictive drug and no one realizes it," he says. "I don't want parents to go through what I put my parents through. I almost died."
How bad are steroids? Consider the plight of pro wrestling and bodybuilding, which are rife with steroid use. According to USA Today, 65 pro wrestlers died between 1997 and 2004 who were 45 years old and younger, 25 from heart attacks or other coronary problems, many with enlarged hearts. When wrestling star Eddie Guerrero died of heart disease at 38 late last year from heart disease that included a hardening and narrowing of the arteries, enlarged organs, etc., brought on by years of steroid abuse pro wrestling decided to start random testing.
Meanwhile, bodybuilders are turning up ripped and R.I.P. Charles Durr, Don Youngblood and Paul DeMayo, as well as powerlifter Anthony Clark, all died within a one-month period last year at the ages of 45, 51, 37 and 38, respectively. Three were related to heart problems. The Bodybuilder.com Web site says of DeMayo, after noting he is 5-foot-10, 270 pounds, "Paul DeMayo works hard for his physique . . . Hopefully we'll see much more of him in the future."
Probably not.
Most parents are clueless about steroid use. A study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed that steroid use among teenagers rose drastically from 1991-2003. The organization's survey revealed that 6 percent of the 15,000 students questioned in 2003 admitted to trying steroid pills or injections at least once.



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