Androgens - The Manly Molecules
- Mechanism: Act as intracellular steroid hormones. Bind to receptors in the cytoplasm, translocate to the nucleus, and modulate gene expression.
- Key Androgens: Testosterone, Dihydrotestosterone (DHT), Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA).
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Clinical Use:
- Hypogonadism (primary or secondary)
- Delayed puberty in boys
- Muscle wasting in cachectic states (e.g., AIDS)
- Anemia (stimulate erythropoietin)
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Adverse Effects:
- Masculinization in females; gynecomastia in males (via aromatization)
- ↓ Spermatogenesis (negative feedback on LH/FSH)
- Premature closure of epiphyseal plates in children
- ↑ LDL, ↓ HDL
- Peliosis hepatis, cholestasis, hepatocellular carcinoma
⭐ Finasteride, a 5α-reductase inhibitor, blocks the conversion of testosterone to the more potent DHT. It's used to treat benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and male pattern baldness.

Steroid Arsenal - Clinical Uses
- Hypogonadism (Primary & Secondary):
- Serves as testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) in cases of testicular, pituitary, or hypothalamic failure.
- Induces puberty in individuals with constitutional delay.
- Andropause: Addresses symptoms related to age-associated decline in testosterone.
- Wasting Syndromes (Cachexia):
- Promotes anabolism and counters protein loss in chronic diseases like AIDS or cancer.
- Aids recovery in severe burn patients by ↑ protein synthesis.
- Anemias:
- Stimulates erythropoietin, historically used for aplastic anemia.
- Hereditary Angioedema:
- Danazol is used to ↑ synthesis of C1 esterase inhibitor.
⭐ Exam Favorite: Abuse of anabolic steroids for athletic enhancement paradoxically leads to hypogonadism. Exogenous testosterone suppresses GnRH, LH, and FSH, causing ↓ endogenous testosterone production, testicular atrophy, and azoospermia.
Roid Rage & Risks - The Downsides
- Cardiovascular
- Dyslipidemia (↑LDL, ↓HDL), hypertension, left ventricular hypertrophy.
- ↑Risk of thrombosis, myocardial infarction, and stroke.
- Psychiatric & Behavioral
- "Roid rage": aggression, irritability, hostility.
- Mood swings, mania, depression, psychosis.
- Endocrine & Reproductive
- Men: ↓Endogenous testosterone, testicular atrophy, infertility, gynecomastia (aromatization to estrogen), male pattern baldness.
- Women: Virilization (hirsutism, acne, voice deepening, clitoromegaly), menstrual irregularities.
- Adolescents: Premature epiphyseal closure → stunted growth.
- Hepatic
- Cholestasis, peliosis hepatis (blood-filled cysts), hepatic neoplasms.
⭐ High-Yield: Exogenous androgens suppress the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis, leading to ↓LH and FSH secretion. This causes decreased endogenous testosterone production and testicular atrophy.

- Androgens (e.g., testosterone, methyltestosterone) bind to intracellular receptors, acting as transcription factors.
- Clinically used for hypogonadism, muscle wasting (cachexia), and promoting secondary sexual characteristics.
- Anabolic steroid abuse causes testicular atrophy and gynecomastia in males due to negative feedback and peripheral conversion to estrogen.
- Key adverse effects include hepatotoxicity (especially 17-alpha-alkylated orals), virilization in females, altered lipids (↓HDL, ↑LDL), and premature epiphyseal closure in children.
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