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Saturday, March 25, 2006

What is Testosterone?

By: Bob Howard

Anabolic steroids are derivatives of the male hormone Testosterone. Once scientists figured out the hormone’s primary effects, they set about developing a class of drugs that maximized the anabolic effects (i.e., muscle building) while minimizing androgenic effects. Steroids were the end result of this research.

Much of the world’s steroid drugs are made from plant compounds called sterols and for years, the popular wild yam plant was the source of much of the world’s industrial supply. The reason is because, at the molecular level, steroids and sterols are virtually identical. In fact the much-hated fat molecule, cholesterol is in the same family as steroids and the body uses cholesterol to manufacture natural hormones. They all have what biochemists call the steroid nucleus.

It only takes the adding or removal of a few atoms to convert a plant sterol into an anabolic steroid or a hormone. To allow oral steroids to survive the digestive process, biochemists have modified the 17-carbon position on the nucleus ring. Of course this modification is what makes oral steroids more dangerous than Injectable steroids.

As with testosterone, it wasn’t long before athletes began using the drugs to assist their training. No one knows precisely when the first athletes started taking the drugs, but at the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki, Finland, organizers found syringes filled with clear liquid in athletes’ locker rooms. Despite the availability of newer performance-enhancing drugs, steroids are still the most popular muscle-building drugs in the world. It seems the genie was let out of the bottle and has no intention of going back inside.

Steroids are believed to work by speeding up the conversion of protein into muscle tissue. In other words, they increase protein synthesis. Another theory is that they keep the body in positive nitrogen balance. Nitrogen is one of the primary ingredients of amino acids, and when levels drop the body may actually start burning muscle tissue as a fuel source — the last thing a hard-training athlete wants to happen. Steroids, however, seem to keep nitrogen levels high, which is the perfect environment for protein synthesis to occur. One of the problems faced by natural trainers is the risk of overtraining and putting the body in negative nitrogen balance. Not only will growth stop, they may actually lose muscle size. But steroid users can train for hours and still recover in time for the next grueling workout.

Before you rush out and make a deal with some back-alley character, keep in mind that, being derivatives of testosterone, it’s not surprising that steroids have many of the same side effects. Even though scientists tried to minimize the androgenic effects of the male hormone, total elimination is all but impossible. Steroid users will still develop acne, have elevated aggression levels, lose scalp hair, and may suffer decreased natural hormone production (remember, the body “thinks” steroids are hormones).

Perhaps the most unsightly side-effect is a condition known as gynocomastia or “bitch tits”. Ironically, one of the breakdown products of steroids is the female hormone estrogen. As the male breast region also contains estrogen receptors, many steroid users develop pronounced female-like breasts. In most cases, the condition will disappear when the steroids are stopped, but in a few cases drugs or even surgery is needed. For women who use steroids, there may be a masculinizing of the vocal chords (which is usually permanent), development of facial hair, and – horror of all horrors – masculinizing of the external genitalia.

We will continue to talk about the effects of steroids in the rest of the web site.
Testosterone Article 02/01 2006

02/01/2006 Article ©Bob Howard expert on bodybuilding. Are looking for more of his Testosterone articles? www.steroids.name/testosterone.htm www.steroids.name/steroids.htm

Thursday, March 16, 2006


Yusuf Adil Shah (1459 - 1511 A.D)

He was the founder of the Adil Shahi dynasty that ruled the Sultanate of Bijapur for nearly two centuries. As the founder of the newly formed Bijapur dynasty (as the Adil Shahi dynasty is also known), Yusuf Adil Shah is credited with developing the town of Bijapur and elevating it to significant status.


The Legend....

A fanciful legend is related in connection with the origins of the Adil Shahi dynasty. Yusuf Adil Shah is said to have been the son of Murad II, Ottoman sultan and caliph of Islam, who was succeeded by one of his sons, Mahommed II. After his accession, the new sultan is said to have ordered the execution by strangling of all his brothers, including Yusuf. Yusuf's mother contrived to save him by replacing him with a slave boy; she then arranged to have Yusuf conveyed to Persia. Yusuf eventually came to India, where he took service under the Bahmani ruler of the Deccan, ultimately becaming a personage of importance at the court of Mahmud II.
Few serious historians give any credence to this legend. Certainly, the claim of direct descent from the Ottoman caliphs may be dismissed out of hand, even if one allows for foreign birth. However, it is noteworthy that the Adil Shahi sultans apparently could not claim any manifest or evident Afghan, Persian or Turko-mongol provenance, as was the fashion of that era. Their bards had to resort to a tale that spoke of such a connection having perforce been hidden for decades; indeed, it is not even clear that Yusuf in his lifetime ever professed awareness of his purported heritage. Hence, indications are that the family was an indigenous one of obscure and probably base origin.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

QUANTUM COMPUTER

A quantum computer is any device for computation that makes direct use of distinctively quantum mechanical phenomena, such as superposition and entanglement, to perform operations on data. In a classical (or conventional) computer, the amount of data is measured by bits; in a quantum computer, it is measured by qubits. The basic principle of quantum computation is that the quantum properties of particles can be used to represent and structure data, and that devised quantum mechanisms can be used to perform operations with this data.

Experiments have already been carried out in which quantum computational operations were executed on a very small number of qubits. Research in both theoretical and practical areas continues at a frantic pace; see Quantum Information Science and Technology Roadmap for a sense of where the research is heading. Many national government and military funding agencies support quantum computing research, to develop quantum computers for both civilian and national security purposes, such as cryptanalysis.

Saturday, March 11, 2006

Today's fact

There is a "cemetery town" in California named Colma. Concerns about the public health, crime, and the need for space forced the city of San Francisco to outlaw burials in 1902. The city of Colma, which is five miles south of San Francisco, was established to bury the dead. The ratio of dead to living people is 750 to 1.



On this day in history ..
1664 - NJ became a British colony
1737 - Galileo's body moved to Church of Santa Croce in Florence - Italy
1849 - 1st gold seekers arrive in Nicaragua en route to Calif
1850 - 1st $20 gold piece issued
1868 - Congress abolishes manufactures tax
1877 - British annex Walvis Bay in southern Africa
1888 - Great blizzard of '88 kill 400 in NE US
1903 - AL offically approves NY Highlanders (Yankees)
1912 - Girl Guides (Girl Scouts) founded in Savanah Ga
1925 - 1st transatlantic radio broadcast
1925 - Chinese rev leader Sun Yat-Sen died
1930 - Mohandas Gandhi began 200-mile march protesting British salt tax
1936 - FDR's 1st "Fireside Chat"
1938 - Germany invades Austria
1939 - Pope Pius XII crowned in Vatican ceremonies
1940 - Finland surrenders to Russia during WW II
1945 - British Empire Day
1958 - Commonwealth Day
1959 - House joins Senate approving Hawaii statehood
1963 - Bob Dylan cancels Ed Sullivan appearance
1966 - Pioneer Plaza dedicated
1968 - Mauritius gains ind from Britain (Natl Day)
1969 - Paul McCartney marries Linda Eastman in London
1977 - Sadat pledges to regain arab terrority from Israel
1980 - Jury finds John Wayne Gacy guilty of murdering 33
1981 - Soyuz T-4 carries 2 cosmonauts to Salyut 6 space station
1981 - Walter R T Witschey installs world's largest sundial - Richmond - VA
1986 - 210.25 million shares traded in NY Stock Exchange

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Today's Fact
Honolulu, Hawaii boasts the only royal palace in the UnitedStates of America.


Today In History

1753 - St. David's Day
1781 - Continental Congress adopts Articles of Confederation
1790 - 1st US census began
1803 - Ohio becomes 17th state
1859 - Present seal of SF adopted (its 2nd)
1864 - Louis Ducos du Hauron patents movie machine (never built)
1864 - Rebecca Lee becomes 1st black woman MD in US
1867 - Nebraska becomes 37th state
1872 - Yellowstone becomes world's 1st national park
1879 - Library of Hawaii founded1919 - Korean independence Demonstrations from Japan begin
1927 - Bank of Italy becomes a Natl Bank
1932 - Charles Lindbergh Jr. kidnapped in NJ; found dead May
1937 - 1st permanent automobile license plates issued (Ct)
1947 - Intl Monetary Fund began operations1951 - 22nd amendment limits president to 2 terms
1961 - Pres Kennedy establishes Peace Corps
1966 - Venera 3 becomes 1st manmade object to impact on a planet (Venus)
1969 - Mickey Mantle announces retirement
1970 - End of coml whale hunting in the US
1970 - White govt of Rhodesia declares ind from Britain
1982 - Soviet Venus 13 soft lands on VenusMore