Man carrying anabolic steroids in undies caught

Friday 16, Dec 2011

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Man carrying anabolic steroids in undies caughtA man from New Zealandwas caught trying to smuggle about 7000 illegal steroid tablets into Australia in his underwear.

Customs officers at  Melbourne Airport stopped the 23-year-old man at Melbourne Airport and arrived on a flight from Bangkok, when they suspected he was concealing something inside his clothing.

From Nzherald.co.nz:

Customs officers at Melbourne Airport stopped the 23-year-old man, who arrived on a flight from Bangkok, when they suspected he was concealing something inside his clothing on Friday.

A search revealed about 7000 tablets, believed to be Dianabol, concealed in four snap-lock plastic bags inside his underwear.

Officers also found a 100ml bottle labelled “Finexol” and 100 “Trenabolone Acetate” tablets.

The man has been charged with smuggling prohibited imports and is due to face the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on September 17.

The maximum penalty for the offence is five years jail and/or a fine of A$110,000 ($136,815).

Wheezing not effectively treatable with steroids

Thursday 18, Feb 2010

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Wheezing not effectively treatable with steroidsSteroid tablets cannot be considered to be an effective form of treatment for offering relief to young children, especially pre-school children, suffering from wheezing induced by virus.

The finding was revealed by a research that involved medical experts at The University of Nottingham. Leading researchers from the universities of Nottingham, Leicester and Bart’s in London were at the center of a leading study to ascertain if steroids are useful for relieving symptoms of wheezing in children under the age of five.

From News-Medical.Net:

There has been ongoing controversy in the medical community regarding how to best treat pre-school children who are admitted to hospital with severe wheezing. Steroids remain an important treatment for children with asthma but pre-school children with viral-induced wheeze, where symptoms are only associated with colds or flu and do not persist when the child is not infected with a virus, have also been treated with steroids in the past. This trial, funded by Asthma UK and published in the New England Journal of Medicine, definitively shows that steroid tablets do not help these children.

The research was carried out by Dr Alan Smyth, Associate Professor and Reader in Child Health, and Terence Stephenson, Professor of Child Health, at The University of Nottingham in collaboration with Dr Monica Lakhanpaul, Senior Lecturer from the University of Leicester and Consultant Paediatrician in Children’s Community Health Service for Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland and Professor Jonathan Grigg of Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry.

Dr Mike Thomas, Chief Medical Advisor for Asthma UK, welcoming the study remarked that the study results offer crucial implications for members of the medical community.

Steroids do not prove efficacious for wheezing children

Thursday 26, Nov 2009

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Steroids do not prove efficacious for wheezing childrenSteroid tablets do not reduce the symptoms of virus-induced wheezing in pre-school children, as per a new research involving medical experts at The University of Nottingham.

Researchers from The universities of Nottingham, Leicester and Bart’s in London have been at the centre of a leading study to evaluate whether or not steroid medications can provide relief from wheezing symptoms in children under the age of five years.

From News-Medical.Net:

There has been ongoing controversy in the medical community regarding how to best treat pre-school children who are admitted to hospital with severe wheezing. Steroids remain an important treatment for children with asthma but pre-school children with viral-induced wheeze, where symptoms are only associated with colds or flu and do not persist when the child is not infected with a virus, have also been treated with steroids in the past. This trial, funded by Asthma UK and published in the New England Journal of Medicine, definitively shows that steroid tablets do not help these children.

The research was carried out by Dr Alan Smyth, Associate Professor and Reader in Child Health, and Terence Stephenson, Professor of Child Health, at The University of Nottingham in collaboration with Dr Monica Lakhanpaul, Senior Lecturer from the University of Leicester and Consultant Paediatrician in Children’s Community Health Service for Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland and Professor Jonathan Grigg of Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry.

Dr Mike Thomas, Chief Medical Advisor for Asthma UK, welcoming this study said that these results could have positive implications for the medical community.


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