Tux
Well-known member
Badslinky, technically your professor is right, but overall it's still not gonna happen. AAS increase muscle mass, which increases metabolism. The more cells you have, the more overall cell replications you have, and therefore the more chances at one of them mutating. However, there is statistically NO chance that you'll somehow get a mutation which causes your children to have higher test levels, lower myostatin levels, etc, from your usage of steroids. You might increase the % of random frame shift mutations yes, but most of those mutations have no effect and are dealt with by the body before they become a problem. T3 would do the exact same thing by increasing metabolic rate, even caffeine/ephedrine will to some degree. AAS still cannot cause your genetics to change in any meaningful way, nor can you pass your "enhanced" body on to your children, as genetically, you're the same as before you used steroids. Yes, you can reset your bodies "set point", and maintain a higher weight and leaner weight than you could have before steroids, but your actual genetic code will remain unchanged. So, all that rambling aside, AAS will not change your genes or your kids.