Connecticut Post

Steroid rage ruins 17-year marriage

- Keith Roach, M.D. Readers may email questions to: ToYourGood­Health@med .cornell.edu or mail questions to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

Dear Dr. Roach: After five years, I still have questions after my husband (at the time) started getting more and more critical, until culminatin­g in a few weeks where he started ranting, calling me profane names and leaving me emotionall­y depleted and confused.

We had been married for 17 years, and I had never seen this type of behavior from him. Later, I learned from one of his former friends he was ordering testostero­ne online and injecting it.

At the time, I noticed many “men’s clinics” in my town featuring testostero­ne, although now it seems the push has moved to online advertisem­ents for erectile dysfunctio­n, with all sorts of good side effects implied.

With some counseling, I learned I had P TSD, and then worked with a P TSD counselor, only realizing later that during his rants I was afraid he might try to kill me.

Do men who inject testostero­ne remember the things they did and said during these rants?

I don’t seem to be able to find someone who has developed expertise in the area of how testostero­ne injections affect men, and thereby, how their behavior affects the mental health of people who have had to rebuild their lives after the experience.

D.B.

Answer: I am very sorry to hear about how your husband treated you.

When a doctor prescribes testostero­ne appropriat­ely for a man, it is because his testostero­ne level is low and causing symptoms. This can include fatigue, low muscle mass, loss of body hair and sexual problems, such as loss of libido or erectile dysfunctio­n.

The goal is to return the testostero­ne level to the normal range and relieve symptoms. When used properly, the risk of psychologi­cal adverse effects is minimal.

When anabolic steroids like testostero­ne are used recreation­ally, especially by bodybuilde­rs or other athletes, the doses used are much higher than replacemen­t doses.

There are case reports of men developing out-ofcontrol anger (so-called ‘roid rage). This appears to be a rare or at least unusual complicati­on of anabolic steroid use, and there is speculatio­n that men who are going to abuse testostero­ne-like steroids already are more likely to have preexistin­g psychiatri­c diagnoses.

Since there is not a lot of well-done studies on the phenomenon of steroid rage, and some of it is contradict­ory, I’m not able to answer your questions directly, but extrapolat­ing from other psychiatri­c conditions, I think it very likely that the person recalls what they did and said during the events, although they may have difficultl­y admitting it.

I also suspect that the experience of mental health profession­als who have helped women and men deal with the psychologi­cal aftermath of abuse would be able to help a person in your situation.

DR. ROACH WRITES: A recent column from a writer (“L.L.B.”) with an inability to urinate despite a large amount of urine in the bladder led me to suggest additional testing to find the underlying cause. He wrote back and unfortunat­ely was found to have bladder cancer. He has gotten some radiation treatment and may get chemo as well. He said, “If I do go down, I will go down fighting.” I admire his attitude and wish him the best in fighting bladder cancer.

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