What are the different uses of catabolic steroids?
Catabolic steroids, also known as corticosteroids, mimic the function of cortisol. One of the main functions of cortisol, produced by the adrenal glands, is to control the body's immune response. Sometimes an insufficient amount of hormone or immune system requires a higher level of control. In these cases, catabolic therapy increases natural cortisol production. Cathabolic steroids, which are available in tablets, injections, creams and as part of inhalers, mainly reduce inflammation and suppress the immune system and can also function as substitution therapy when the body creates insufficient amount of cortisol. When an infection is present, the immune system transmits inflammatory cells to surround the infection source to locate and prevent the rest of the body. Steroids inhibit the production of inflammatory cells such as lymphocytes and inflammation products, including prostaglandins and leukotrins. The blood vessels are also narrowed, minimizing the onslaught of inflammatory cells. In this way, some are treatedTeré allergic reactions and a number of inflammatory conditions, including asthma, arthritis and chronic obstructive lung disease (COPD).
immunosuppression is also achieved by using catabolic steroids. They are commonly prescribed for an autoimmune disease where the immune system perceives its own tissue as a foreign attacker and attacks it chronically. Steroids reduce both the number of lymphocytes that are produced by the immune system and the extent of their function, leading to a significant reduction in attack on healthy cells. Steroids suppress the immune system in a number of autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and inflammatory intestine disruptions such as ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Since the immune system is depressed by catabolic steroids, the side effect of therapy is that patients are much more susceptible to infection.
Finally, doctors use catabolicSteroids for alternative therapy in patients who naturally do not create sufficient cortisol, which in turn affects their body metabolism. Insufficiency can be caused by the adrenal glands are not properly formed, the glands that have been impaired, such as drugs and glands that have been damaged. For example, on Addison's disease, the adrenal glands may be injured by the person's own immune system. As a result, the glands do not produce sufficient cortisol and do not require substitution therapy with catabolic steroids.