Dr Tom Heffernan from Northumbria University's Department of Psychology aimed to examine whether the long-term use of high doses of anabolic-androgenic steroids within a sporting context might affect everyday memory.
He assessed almost 100 males aged 18-30 who were regular gym users. Half of the group used steroids and half did not.
The results showed that those using steroids had significantly more deficits in their prospective and retrospective memory functioning, as well as their mental executive function, compared to non-users.
They were also 28 per cent more forgetting when recalling past memories or previous facts, known as retrospective memory, and demonstrated a 32 per cent difference in their mental executive function compared to non-users.
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Executive functioning is a term used to describe a number of cognitive processes that help an individual to pay attention, coordinate information and plan and execute tasks.
While a previous study from Harvard University found deficits in visuo-spatial memory in long-term steroid users, this is the first study to explore the impact that steroid use in a sporting context has on memory for everyday activities.
"The non-medical use of anabolic-androgenic steroid use came to the forefront in the 1960s when elite athletes and bodybuilders used the drugs to promote muscle growth and improve performance levels," Heffernan said.
"Since the 1980s many millions of individuals worldwide have used such steroids in a sporting context, which has now become much more widespread within non-competitive recreational sports circles.
"Our findings suggest that long-term use of anabolic-androgenic steroids has a significant impact on an individual's everyday memory and ability to remember," said Heffernan.
The study is published in The Open Psychiatry Journal.