Health ShortsSteroids
Corticosteroids Increase Glaucoma Risk
Increased pressure within the eye is a possible complication of corticosteroid medications prescribed to treat asthma, arthritis, allergies or skin rashes. About 5 percent of patients are "high responders" and another 30 percent are "moderate responders" to corticosteroids, experiencing increased intraocular pressure that can lead to glaucoma.
[SOURCE: J.W. Stokkermans, "There More to Steroids than Meets the Eye," Review of Optometry, March 15, 2002] High-Dose Steroids Raise Stroke Risk A randomized controlled study of patients with frozen shoulder found that subjects given a single corticosteroid injection, with or without physical therapy, had quicker improvement of symptoms than those treated with physical therapy alone or placebo. The greatest improvement was shown in the group getting combination therapy, but the difference was not statistically significant.
[SOURCE: S. Carette, et al, "Intraarticular Corticosteroids, Supervised Physiotherapy, or a Combination of the Two in the Treatment of Adhesive Capsulitis of the Shoulder: A Placebo-Controlled Trial," Arthritis Rheum, March, 2003; Allan S. Brett, Journal Watch, May 1, 2003] Steroids Put Teens at Risk
About two to three percent of American adolescents have taken anabolic steroids, and a recent survey found that regular use among teenaged boys increased 25 percent from 1999 to 2000. Anabolic steroids are most commonly used in an effort to improve athletic performance, but many youth surveyed-both males and females-indicated that they didn't play sports but used the substances to improve appearance. In addition to being illegal, steroids can have severe and lasting effects, including permanently short stature and damage to the liver, heart and other body organs.
[SOURCE: "Steroid Use Rising among Non-Athletes," Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Weekly, December 16, 2002; Steven Ungerleider, "Steroids: Youth at Risk," Harvard Mental Health Letter, May, 2001]
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