Pubdate: Tue, 15 Jan 2002
Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA)
Copyright: 2002 San Jose Mercury News
Contact:  http://www.sjmercury.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390
Author: Julie Sevrens Lyons

HEARING HIGHLIGHTS ALARM OVER STUDENT USE OF SUPPLEMENTS

Keeping Performance-Enhancing Drugs Away From Young Athletes Would Be 
Difficult, Costly, Experts Say

SACRAMENTO -- Although the sometimes lethal stimulant ephedra has 
been banned from the Olympics and professional football, even middle 
school students now are using it to boost their sports prowess, 
school officials and medical experts testified before a joint state 
Senate committee hearing Monday.

Schools neither ban nor test for the unregulated dietary supplement, 
which is sold over the counter in health food stores.

Ephedra is nearly as potent as speed and has been linked to more than 
80 deaths nationwide, but it has become one of the supplements of 
choice among teen athletes feeling the pressure to perform, and it 
has politicians and parents alike most worried. They're also alarmed 
by the boost the entire sports supplement industry has received from 
teens as the result of sports celebrities such as baseball slugger 
Mark McGwire revealing they excelled while taking products containing 
androstenedione or creatine.

``It's not a matter of `Are you taking?' It's, `Hey, what are you 
taking? And where can I get it?' '' said Greg Davis, 19, the former 
captain of the varsity football team at Danville's San Ramon Valley 
High School. Davis testified that he suffered two seizures after 
taking four so-called performance-enhancing products in 1999 and 2000 
but that his medical problems ended once he stopped taking the 
products.

Indeed, believing sports supplements are no more harmful than 
vitamins and can increase their chances of winning college 
scholarships, an estimated 1 million youths ages 12 to 17 have taken 
them, according to a national survey commissioned by Blue Cross and 
Blue Shield. Twenty percent of the teens polled said they knew 
someone who was taking the supplements.

Long-term risks unclear

Yet seizures, strokes, heart attacks and kidney problems are just a 
few of the most severe side effects associated with the supplements, 
and youths need neither a doctor's prescription nor a parent's 
permission to acquire them. The products have not been approved by 
the government and have rarely, if ever, been tested on minors. 
Researchers are not sure what the long-term health risks might be.

Worried that student-athletes may be putting their developing bodies 
at risk, Sen. Jackie Speier, D-San Mateo, introduced legislation 
restricting the sale of ephedra-based dietary supplements to minors 
in California. The bill, SB 397, is currently at the Assembly 
Appropriations Committee.

But experts testified Monday that keeping the popular pills out of 
the hands of student-athletes may be a tall order and will likely 
take money, time and a sweeping public education campaign to achieve.

The Internet is teeming with Web sites targeting kids barely old 
enough to participate on teams. The sites tout the popular pills and 
potions as ``safe and designed to enhance workouts and development.''

One, Teen Advantage Creatine Serum, bills itself as Developed 
especially for young aspiring athletes 8-19 years of age,'' and comes 
in a bright red liquid form, rather than as a traditional powder.

By all accounts, even middle school students are biting. About 2 
percent of youths ages 10-14 have taken substances they thought would 
boost their athletic ability, the Blue Cross and Blue Shield poll 
determined.

``It is an epidemic,'' said Roger Blake, assistant executive director 
of the California Interscholastic Federation. ``Coaches say, `We need 
to get bigger, stronger and faster to be competitive next year.' ''

High schools could use voluntary or mandatory drug testing programs 
in the attempt to curb the rampant use of supplements. But such 
programs are costly for cash-strapped school systems and can be 
embarrassing for students, who are required to urinate into specimen 
cups in front of a test administrator.

Plus, some savvy supplement users and abusers always seem to find 
ways to cheat on their drug tests. College athletes who are regularly 
tested for performance-enhancing supplements have introduced agents 
such as bleach or eyedrops into test tubes to throw off the results, 
experts testified. Others stop their supplement use weeks before the 
test and start up again after passing.

Many teens believe ephedra, creatine and androstenedione, or 
``andro,'' are no more dangerous than multivitamins.

``People exaggerate the side effects way too much, I think,'' said 
Daniel Han, 18, a clerk at General Nutrition Center in Cupertino who 
has taken ephedra for a year. It gives me a lot of energy, and I've 
noticed no side effects.''

Doctors, however, say the supplements can have serious side effects.

Andro, which is naturally found in the body and is involved in the 
production of testosterone in men, could cause menstrual 
irregularities, excessive body hair growth and a deepening voice in 
female athletes taking too much of it, said Gary Green, a 
sports-medicine physician at the UCLA Olympic Analytical Laboratory.

Ephedra, also known as ma huang, is considered even more dangerous. 
Since 1994, products containing ephedrine have been linked to dozens 
of deaths nationwide and prompted more than 1,400 complaints, 
according to the Food and Drug Administration.

Banned by NCAA, NFL

Concerned about the risk to its players, the National Football League 
added ephedra to its list of banned substances last summer. The 
International Olympic Committee also bars the use of ephedra among 
athletes, as does the National Collegiate Athletic Association.

State senators attending Monday's hearing said it was frustrating 
that there aren't similar restrictions -- and protections -- in place 
at the high school level.

``This has a serious impact on our young people's future,'' Speier 
said, ``not just whether they'll get a football scholarship but 
whether they'll be able to have kids in 10 years.''
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