3 research outputs found

    Prevalence of Use of Anabolic Steroids by Bodybuilders Using Three Methods in a City of Iran

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    Background: The prevalence of substance use among bodybuilding athletes has been poorly studied in Iran. This study was conducted to examine the prevalence of drug use, especially anabolic steroids, among bodybuilding athletes. Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted in the first half of 2013 among body building athletes referring to gyms located in Kerman, Iran. Five gyms were selected randomly and 380 athletes were invited to complete a self-administered anonymous questionnaire, consecutively. The questionnaire included two parts; baseline characteristics and substance related questions. The prevalence of anabolic steroids was estimated based on three methods; self-report, projective question, and crosswise model. Findings: We enrolled 298 male athletes in the final analysis. Mean ± SD age of subjects was 25.9 ± 8.4. The most frequent recent (past 30 days) drug use was waterpipe smoking (45%). The second most frequently used drug was alcohol (26.5%, recent use). Based on self-reports, the prevalence of lifetime anabolic steroid use was calculated to be 24.5%. The corresponding figure based on crosswise method was obtained to be 56.8%. Participants believed that a median of 40% of athletes had used anabolic steroids in their lifetime. The prevalence of anabolic steroid was higher in single and less educated individuals (P < 0.05). The main reason for using anabolic steroids was to increase muscle size. Conclusion: The prevalence of drug use, especially tobacco, alcohol, and anabolic steroids, was high among bodybuilding athletes. We could not rely on self-reports to examine anabolic steroid use. Keywords: Substance abuse, Anabolic steroids, Athletes, Ira

    Dynamic Joint Functional Split and Resource Allocation Optimization in Elastic Optical Fronthaul

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    Dynamic reconfigurability in optical and mobile networks can facilitate heterogeneous service provisioning while utilizing minimal resources. This allows cost-efficient service delivery resulting in high revenues for network operators. Deployment of elastic mobile and optical networks is a key driver for enabling reconfigurability in modern networks. Elastic optical networks can be exploited as the fronthaul portion of new generation of mobile networks. Such elastic optical fronthaul networks facilitate joint reconfiguration of flexible radio and optical elements and provide considerable performance improvements. In this paper, we focus on the joint dynamic selection of functional splits and configuration of optical transponders and illustrate that designing a converged network with optical and radio elements improves network power efficiency. A time-averaged stochastic optimization problem is formulated and its solution is derived using a modified version of the Lyapunov drift technique. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed scheme can reduce the average power consumption by up to 70% compared to a cloud radio access network with a traditional optical fronthaul. Further, the results show that the modified Lyapunov technique can afford stringent fronthaul delays below 250 μs. We also discuss how future technology upgrades such as increasing the number of radio antenna ports and decreasing the granularity of fiber spectrum grid may influence the results
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