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When you take a steroid into the body it does not necessarily remain in the same chemical structure that it began in. Anabolic/androgenic steroids (AAS), when introduced into the body, do not necessarily remain unchanged. It is the Enzymatic processes that often convert the steroid molecules into different variant molecules. This is true of the famous nutritional supplement prohormones as well such as androstenedione, this will not necessarily remain as androstenedione, but some of it will be converted to testosterone. Although that example is well known, many other enzymatic conversions of steroids are less well-known in bodybuilding. It is these less known enzymatic conversions that we shall be focussing on in this section of the book. Esterases The enzymes that accomplish this transformation are called esterases, and are widely present in the body. Aside from allowing use of esterified drugs, they have another effect: they can also work in the reverse direction. Instead of removing an ester from the esterified drug, they can add an ester to the parent drug. This can increase the lifetime of the drug in the body. Thus, it could be expected that some small amount of a norandro prohormone would be converted to an esterified form, and would remain (in trace amounts) in the system for quite some time. Unfortunately, analytical techniques today are sufficient to detect nandrolone or its metabolites in extremely low concentrations. Thus, the norandro products cannot be recommended to anyone who might be subject to drug testing for AAS. In other words, taking even a norandro based pro-hormone product would fail you a drug test for anabolic steroids - even though it is not classed as an anabolic steroid. It should be noted here that Esterases cannot work well on steroid esters that are 17alpha alkylated, because the alkylation blocks the approach of the enzyme to the ester. This is the reason that no such drugs are sold – there are no esters of Dianabol, methyltestosterone, Anadrol®, oxandrolone, Winstrol, etc., and there never will be. They would be inactive. Any person pretending to sell anything to the contrary will be selling a fake steroid.
Aromatase Aromatase and its effect upon the bodybuilder are not good for a quality lean and hard physique and so Aromatase is the first enzyme we have discussed where we are interested in reducing its activity. This may be done by either of two types (usually) of inhibitors: competitive inhibitors and mechanism-based (suicide) inhibitors. Competitive inhibitors act by binding to the same site of the enzyme as the steroid molecule would. These are very popular. Arimidex, for example, does this. Whatever percentage of enzyme has the inhibitor bound to it, is inactive for as long as the inhibitor is bound. Thus, a small amount of inhibitor might inhibit only a small percentage of the enzyme molecules, whereas a larger amount would inhibit a higher percentage, greatly reducing the overall effects of the aromatized steroid. The inhibitor also must compete with the steroid for access to the binding site. Thus, if there is a very high amount of steroid, the steroid will be likely to "get there first" and the inhibitor will be less effective: unless its concentration is likewise increased. Thus, while Arimidex may do an excellent job at 1 mg/day for an AIDS patient using 250 mg/week of testosterone, it may fail to outcompete 1 gram per week of testosterone unless the dose is increased. This problem is true of Cytadren also. So basically, the dosage of an effective competitive inhibitor is directly proportional to the dosage of AAS being used at any one time in order to reduce the negative effects of this catalytic reaction. We then have the mechanism-based inhibitor - the other type of aromatase inhibitor is one that actually destroys the enzyme, and is itself destroyed in the process. This is how this inhibitor has earned the name suicide inhibitor. An example of this type is Lentaron. It has not seen much use in bodybuilding and its efficacy is not clear. Although research continues in this field and bodybuilders being bodybuilders are always keen to try out new drugs and see just how effective and useful they could potentially be. Aromatase works in only one direction: it cannot convert an aromatized steroid back to an unaromatized one. Once aromatized you cannot reverse the process with any drug. Aromatase cannot work on DHT, Proviron, Winstrol, oxandrolone, Halotestin, or Primobolan, and there is no evidence that it can work on trenbolone. It is not clear if it works on Anadrol® or perhaps on an Anadrol® metabolite. There appears to be no scientific evidence that Anadrol® aromatizes to estrogen, a fact pointed out by Pat Arnold. It may be that it does not have estrogenic activity at all, but progestogenic activity. This also could be a potent inducer of gyno and bloating. So although Anadrol is unlikey to be directly estrogenic as aromatase is unlikely to have any effect upon it, it can still cause heavy estrogenic type results due in course to its progestogenic route in the body. 5alpha-reductase This means that it can convert nandrolone to DHN or testosterone to DHT yet it cannot convert Winstrol or Anadrol® despite what may be claimed by certain people and experts out there - it is just chemically impossible. And although Dianabol does have a double bond between carbons 4 and 5, it nonetheless also is not converted by 5AR. This is of course an exception to the rule. Both Type 1 and Type 2 versions (isozymes) of 5AR exist. Type 2 is present in the prostate, and Proscar is a good inhibitor of that isozyme. Type 1 is present in the scalp and skin, and unfortunately Proscar is a poor inhibitor for that type. There are a number of experimental Type 1 inhibitors, such as MK-386, which will likely be of use in treating acne or male-pattern baldness, but they are not on the market yet. Proscar is heavily used by bodybuilders of course to limit the negative effects of DHT on the aforementioned male-pattern-baldness, thinning and receeding hair line common with use of heavily converting steroids to DHT. P450 enzymes (various)
17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17bHSD) Because the enzyme works in two directions, it cannot convert a keto steroid entirely to the hydroxy, or vice versa, because some of what is converted will then be acted upon again and return to its original state. Thus, there will always be a mixture of the two compounds. In some cases, the mixture might favor one side of the balance. 3bHSD is widely distributed in
the body.
3-oxosteroid-4,5-isomerase UDP-glucuronysyltransferase (UDPGT) This action is reversible to a minor extent in the body by glycosidase enzymes. It is reversed to a significant extent, however, in what is called enterohepatic recycling. In this process, deactivated, glucuronidated steroids are excreted in the bile into the intestine, where bacteria then cleave the glucuronide, restoring the steroid. Much of this steroid will then be reabsorbed by the body. The result is, just because a steroid is excreted once, doesn’t mean it still won’t come back for another turn. This phenomenon is quite important in birth control, and is the reason why antibiotics can interfere with The Pill. The amount of bacteria in the intestine is reduced by the antibiotics, which reduces the degree of recycling, and thus reduces estrogen levels. It would also be the case, for an androgen user, that antibiotic use would reduce enterohepatic recycling, and thus cause a given dose of steroid to have less effect. Men have about twice as much UDPGT activity on steroids as women do. There is also a great deal of variation between individuals. Sulfotransferases (various types,
including DHEA-ST) Sulfation generally occurs at a slower rate than glucuronidation, but nonetheless the process is still significant in the metabolism of testosterone, where conversion in the liver to the sulfate inactivates the drug and makes it more readily excreted in the bile (and again, enterohepatic recycling can occur.) Summary Control of the aromatase enzyme by inhibitors is recommended if aromatizable steroids with a C19 group (e.g., testosterone, Dianabol) are being used. In other words anti-aromatase drugs are in order for use when one is using any drug that easily converts due to the effects of the aromatase enzyme. A 5AR inhibitor is recommended in cases where testosterone is being used and the individual is particularly concerned about the prostate. Should a Type 1 5AR inhibitor become available, it would be of use in limiting the acne-inducing and male pattern baldness accelerating activities of testosterone. |
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