Sunday 31 August 2008

Bodybuilder scarred from steroids

Anyone considering using steroids to bulk up may want to think again after seeing pictures of the horrific scars suffered by one young bodybuilder.


German doctors were shocked at the extent of the massive, deep ulcerating sores on the chest and back of the 21-year-old man.


After antiseptic and antibiotic therapy the wounds healed but left permanent scars, The Lancet reported.


Experts said steroid-induced acne was usually much milder.


Figures from the British Crime Survey put the number of steroid users at 42,000 but some experts believe the true figure could be twice as high.















Anabolic steroids ar usually synthesised from the male reproduction hormone testosterone.


They have been banned by many sporting bodies, including the International Olympic Committee, because of their danger to wellness and the potential for competitive advantage.


Known side-effects include potential hurt to major organs in the body such as the liver and heart.


Moderate use


Dr Peter Arne Gerber, from the Department of Dermatology at Heinrich-Heine-University in D�sseldorf, Germany, said moderate amounts of the drug could cause big problems.


"Usually in people taking temper doses of the dose you run across some sort of mild acne but in severe cases it can ulcerate.








The acne became severely ulcerated



"The doses this man was taking were within the doses that are victimised among bodybuilders."


Dr Gerber added that the man did not point taking the steroids in one case the skin problems developed because he was more concerned with losing muscle mass.


He eventually stopped just by and so it was found the steroid abuse had also caused a low spermatozoon count and shrunken testicles.


"There is plausibly a dose-effect with the steroids merely it's too dependent on how the individual reacts," he said.


"It is confutative whether he will be able to start construction muscle mass again - he may not be able to perform the exercises due to the scarring."


UK experts said steroids were associated with this kind of acne merely it was extremely rare to see such a severe case.





Although the sores healed, he is left with permanent scars



Professor Peter Sonksen, an emeritus prof of endocrinology at St Thomas' Hospital in London, said at the doses used by the military personnel he would expect to see problems but he was still shocked at the extent of the scarring.


"It shows young people the dangers."


Jim McVeigh, head of substance use at Liverpool John Moores University, said: "It's well documented that some individuals lav experience severe acne.


"Often this is simply a transient problem - most people wouldn't reckon it a significant barrier to victimisation anabolic steroids."


He added at that place was a lack of studies examining the side effects of steroid abuse and called for "robust scientific inquiry" to ground exactly what effects anabolic steroids take on heavy users.







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Thursday 21 August 2008

'CSI' gets its man: Laurence Fishburne joins cast

LOS ANGELES �

"CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" has solved the mystery of who will replace departing CBS series star William Petersen: It's Laurence Fishburne.


Fishburne, an Emmy and Tony winner, will be introduced in the ninth installment of the upcoming tenth season, the network told The Associated Press on Monday. He'll play a forensics scientist with a secret.


Fishburne is a "CSI" newcomer in more shipway than peerless. Asked if he's a fan, he told a teleconference Monday that he was humiliated to admit he'd ne'er watched ahead he was approached by producers.


"But I am at present," he aforementioned. He screened past episodes that were engaging and "kind of dark and moody, like the work I've been involved in," he said.


"Wow, this will work," Fishburne recalled thinking.


He was their top alternative, said executive producers Carol Mendelsohn and Naren Shankar, with a deeply intelligent approach to his mould that matches the drama's spirit.


This is the number one ongoing series role for the coveted film and stage role player since, unbelievably enough, he played Cowboy Curtis on "Pee-wee's Playhouse" in the late eighties. He's not stepping away from movies with "CSI," Fishburne aforementioned, but embarking on a "welcome change."


Fishburne will play a college lecturer and former pathologist who is focused on why the great unwashed commit acts of the Apostles of violence. The grapheme is unnamed for now but has been dubbed "The Professor."


The air date for Petersen's final episode has in time to be determined merely will be early side by side year. Petersen has been with the series since it debuted in fall 2000 and will stay a "CSI" executive manufacturer, the mesh said.


Fishburne's character has a deep connection to his work: "The Professor" shares certain biologic characteristics associated with aggressiveness and criminal behavior, Shankar said.


Shankar aforesaid the show wasn't backing away from CBS programming chief Nina Tassler's former description of the role, in which she aforesaid he divided the genetic makeup of serial killers.


Subsequent research has since shown that "in reality, in that respect is no such thing," so the character is changing class, Shankar aforementioned. How his nature testament play out in stories has until now to be determined, he and Mendelsohn said.



Fishburne's character, whom Tassler said was keeping his background to himself, meets members of the "CSI" team during a remove investigation and ends up joining them.


Fishburne, 47, received an Oscar nomination for his depicting of Ike Turner in 1993's "What's Love Got to Do With It" and a Tony in 1992 for "Two Trains Running." He was a Tony campaigner this year for the one-man show, "Thurgood," around Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.


His celluloid credits include the "Matrix" sci-fi films, in which he played Morpheus; "Apocalypse Now"; "The Color Purple"; "Mystic River"; "21"; "Akeelah and the Bee"; and "Biker Boyz." He as well is a writer and director.


"CBS asked us, `Who's at the top of your dream list?'" Mendelsohn and Shankar said in a joint statement. "Without vacillation, we aforementioned Laurence Fishburne. He is a brawny and acute actor, with an unbelievable range."


Fishburne earned an Emmy for the 1993 premiere episode of Fox's "Tribeca" and another for the movie "Miss Evers' Boys," which marked rare TV projects for the doer. Early in his life history, he appeared in shows including "Miami Vice" and "Hill Street Blues."


The long-running "CSI" remains key for CBS: It finished utmost season as the network's top-rated series, ranking No. 9 among all shows with an average weekly audience of 17 million. Spinoffs "CSI: Miami" and "CSI: New York" stratified 16th and 28th, respectively.


Producers have been mum about upcoming plot points. But they aforesaid Petersen's role, Gil Grissom, will be reappraising his life after years of high-tech forensics investigations with the Las Vegas Police Department and after facing personal turmoil.


"CSI," which begins its new season Oct. 9, is ready to deal with Petersen's loss, said Shankar.


"What makes shows go off the rails is they forget world Health Organization they ar. We're a crime-mystery-forensics drama" and that won't change, Shankar aforesaid in July.


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CBS is a division of CBS Corp.


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On the Net:


http://www.cbs.com/










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Monday 11 August 2008

Advocates for disabled to protest "Tropic Thunder"

LOS ANGELES () - Groups that advocate for the handicapped called on Sunday for a national boycott of the Ben Stiller comedy "Tropic Thunder," citing what they enunciate is its negative portrait of people with intellectual disabilities.





"We are asking the great unwashed not to go to the flick and promise to play a knowingness to citizenry about exploitation derogatory words about this population," said Peter Wheeler, spokesman for Special Olympics, one of 22 disablement groups countrywide protesting the satire.





The plastic film, directed by Stiller, will be released on Wednesday by Viacom Inc's Paramount Pictures and its DreamWorks unit.





The groups plan to picket the movie's premier on Monday evening in Los Angeles's Westwood residential district.





"That will be the take up of a nationwide protestation," said Wheeler. "We will continue to be vocal about the destructive gist of this film."





He said the groups are specially offended by the film's repeated enjoyment of the word "slow up" regarding a character, Simple Jack, played by Stiller in a subplot about an thespian.





Representatives of the Special Olympics, the Arc of the United States, the National Down Syndrome Congress, the American Association of People with Disabilities and other groups met with studio executives final week to discuss the film, but DreamWorks did not make any changes.





Peter Berns, executive director director the Arc, aforementioned in a memo the groups presented various ideas to the studio, from requesting an apology to fixing the film in front its waiver, to producing a national educational movement.�






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Wednesday 6 August 2008

Vibe Tribe

Vibe Tribe   
Artist: Vibe Tribe

   Genre(s): 
Trance: Psychedelic
   



Discography:


Wise Cracks   
 Wise Cracks

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 10