Various mechanisms are involved in the process of ethanol-induced tissue impairment. Oxidative stress and its effects are among the most important. We compared the effects of antioxidant vitamins (vitamin C and E in combination) and steroids (testosterone and nandrolone separately) on the toxicity of ethanol in rats. Animals (male Wistar rats, n = 48) were randomised into following groups-Control, Ethanol, Testosterone, Ethanol + Testosterone, Ethanol + Nandrolone, Ethanol + Vitamins. Alcohol was given daily by gavage in a dose of 5 g/kg of body weight. On the 27th day of the study the animals were sacrificed by decapitation and tissue samples were taken. Metabolic status, parameters of the hepatic metabolism, hormone levels (testosterone, ACTH, corticosterone), lipoperoxidation markers (malondialdehyde and conjugated diens in forebrain cortex and in cerebellum) and advanced glycation end-products were analysed. Tissue samples underwent histological examination. Histological outcomes showed a protective effect of antioxidants on hepatic and cerebellar injury caused by chronic ethanol intake. Anabolic steroids protected especially the central nervous tissue against the toxicity of alcohol. Both, antioxidant vitamins and anabolic steroids protect against the ethanol-induced toxicity, however, this effect is tissue specific.