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-   -   A more reasonable way of EPO testing (http://www.cyclebanter.com/showthread.php?t=162116)

Caroline May 27th 07 08:53 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
The drug testing entities are driving themselves nuts. Why? Because every
time they think they have the lid on one thing, the lid pops off another.
EPOs, testosterone, HGH, caffeine.... Well, the list is too long to delve
into here, but the list of banned drugs is looooooooong. EPOs are the topic
at hand. Questions of who has used and who (if any) haven't. And the
testing is expensive and not always completely reliable.

Some of these items come into serious question when illnesses are involved.
There is no doubt in my mind that Lance Armstrong was given EPOs as part of
his chemotherapy recovery. It is a standard safeguard for saving the
patient's life. But I have no way of knowing whether he was given them when
he was in competition, nor do I have any way of knowing whether they gave
him any advantage if he was, or if they just brought his red cell count to
"within normal limits." Only his doctors know for sure. He may not even
know.

The point is that there are times when banned substances are required to
keep an athlete functioning normally. Cortisone *MAY* have been a
requirement to keep Landis' hip functioning during TDF.

For all of these drugs there are easy blood tests to show whether they are
in balance, or "within normal limits." Soooo.... Wouldn't it be so much
easier simply to collect pre-race blood samples from all the athletes and
have them analyzed for whatever may be outside normal limits? Simply
announce that if your blood does not meet "race standards" you will be
disqualified. Period. Then who cares if people take EPOs? If they take
enough to give them an unfair edge, they're out of the game!

And the testing is so much easier and cheaper.

Oh... A question was recently asked about what drugs are banned. If you
have any questions, you can call the IOC (or in the U.S. call USOC) Medical
Hotline and ask. They have a current list for everything from cough meds
that contain banned substances (and cough meds that don't) to blood doping
no-nos. (God, I hope this information isn't out-dated!)

Caroline



Dan Gregory May 27th 07 11:44 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
Caroline wrote:


A question was recently asked about what drugs are banned. If you
have any questions, you can call the IOC (or in the U.S. call USOC) Medical
Hotline and ask. They have a current list for everything from cough meds
that contain banned substances (and cough meds that don't) to blood doping
no-nos. (God, I hope this information isn't out-dated!)



Quicker to go to

http://www.didglobal.com/page/didenqs/home



Tom Kunich May 29th 07 12:07 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"Caroline" wrote in message
news:Akl6i.2128$9G3.1906@trnddc07...

Some of these items come into serious question when illnesses are
involved. There is no doubt in my mind that Lance Armstrong was given EPOs
as part of his chemotherapy recovery. It is a standard safeguard for
saving the patient's life. But I have no way of knowing whether he was
given them when he was in competition, nor do I have any way of knowing
whether they gave him any advantage if he was, or if they just brought his
red cell count to "within normal limits." Only his doctors know for sure.
He may not even know.


Here's a clue - the phoney "blood test" that they supposedly ran in France
with Lance's blood that they claimed contained EPO showed a hematocrit of
38%.



Tom Grosman May 29th 07 01:10 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"Tom Kunich" cyclintom@yahoo. com a écrit dans le message de news:
. net...
| "Caroline" wrote in message
| news:Akl6i.2128$9G3.1906@trnddc07...
|
| Some of these items come into serious question when illnesses are
| involved. There is no doubt in my mind that Lance Armstrong was given
EPOs
| as part of his chemotherapy recovery. It is a standard safeguard for
| saving the patient's life. But I have no way of knowing whether he was
| given them when he was in competition, nor do I have any way of knowing
| whether they gave him any advantage if he was, or if they just brought
his
| red cell count to "within normal limits." Only his doctors know for
sure.
| He may not even know.
|
| Here's a clue - the phoney "blood test" that they supposedly ran in France
| with Lance's blood that they claimed contained EPO showed a hematocrit of
| 38%.
|
What "phoney "blood test" " are you referring to?



Curtis L. Russell May 29th 07 03:05 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
On Sun, 27 May 2007 19:53:04 GMT, "Caroline"
wrote:

For all of these drugs there are easy blood tests to show whether they are
in balance, or "within normal limits." Soooo.... Wouldn't it be so much
easier simply to collect pre-race blood samples from all the athletes and
have them analyzed for whatever may be outside normal limits? Simply
announce that if your blood does not meet "race standards" you will be
disqualified. Period. Then who cares if people take EPOs? If they take
enough to give them an unfair edge, they're out of the game!


For all of the drugs? Some of the tests take three days if the lab is
ready for them. Most take several hours at a minimum because the
machinery necessary to make all testing equal has to be set up first
(single assay testing in lots of over 100 isn't a great way to prep
for the later legal battles), followed by the actual testing. You'd
still be disqualifying people hours and days after the day's racing.

FWIW, it still won't be cheap - some test kits - if you do all the
drugs - will cost you in the hundreds for the kit alone, if done in
batches. That will be for one drug in some cases, per person...

Curtis L. Russell
Odenton, MD (USA)
Just someone on two wheels...

[email protected] May 29th 07 06:02 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
On May 28, 7:07 pm, "Tom Kunich" cyclintom@yahoo. com wrote:
"Caroline" wrote in message

news:Akl6i.2128$9G3.1906@trnddc07...



Some of these items come into serious question when illnesses are
involved. There is no doubt in my mind that Lance Armstrong was given EPOs
as part of his chemotherapy recovery. It is a standard safeguard for
saving the patient's life. But I have no way of knowing whether he was
given them when he was in competition, nor do I have any way of knowing
whether they gave him any advantage if he was, or if they just brought his
red cell count to "within normal limits." Only his doctors know for sure.
He may not even know.


Here's a clue - the phoney "blood test" that they supposedly ran in France
with Lance's blood that they claimed contained EPO showed a hematocrit of
38%.


dumbass,

you are confused and your argument based on your confusion just makes
you look stupid. the EPO test was on urine, there was never a blood
test as you claim.


Simon Brooke May 29th 07 11:51 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
in message Akl6i.2128$9G3.1906@trnddc07, Caroline
') wrote:

For all of these drugs there are easy blood tests to show whether they
are in balance, or "within normal limits." Â*Soooo.... Â*Wouldn't it be so
much easier simply to collect pre-race blood samples from all the
athletes and have them analyzed for whatever may be outside normal
limits? Â*Simply announce that if your blood does not meet "race
standards" you will be disqualified. Â*Period. Â*Then who cares if people
take EPOs? Â*If they take enough to give them an unfair edge, they're out
of the game!


I instinctively dislike your idea, but it does have merits.

I dislike it because it might unfairly penalise people who through
perfectly natural accidents of genetics has parameters which are outside
your 'normal limits' - and, indeed, might penalise them even if their
genetic peculiarity were not 'performance enhancing'. Such a person might
never be able to compete, because it might be impossible to get their body
tuned within the 'normal limits' which had been defined.

However, it would have the great merit of not caring whether your enhanced
haematocrit was caused by physical apparatus (an altitude tent) or
chemical apparatus (EPO). I find those athletes who rail against 'drug
cheats' while using altitude tents nauseatingly hypocritical.

--
(Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/

pSchroedinger's cat is blinkstrongNOT/strong/blink dead./p


RonSonic May 29th 07 03:26 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
On Tue, 29 May 2007 11:51:14 +0100, Simon Brooke wrote:

in message Akl6i.2128$9G3.1906@trnddc07, Caroline
') wrote:

For all of these drugs there are easy blood tests to show whether they
are in balance, or "within normal limits." *Soooo.... *Wouldn't it be so
much easier simply to collect pre-race blood samples from all the
athletes and have them analyzed for whatever may be outside normal
limits? *Simply announce that if your blood does not meet "race
standards" you will be disqualified. *Period. *Then who cares if people
take EPOs? *If they take enough to give them an unfair edge, they're out
of the game!


I instinctively dislike your idea, but it does have merits.

I dislike it because it might unfairly penalise people who through
perfectly natural accidents of genetics has parameters which are outside
your 'normal limits' - and, indeed, might penalise them even if their
genetic peculiarity were not 'performance enhancing'. Such a person might
never be able to compete, because it might be impossible to get their body
tuned within the 'normal limits' which had been defined.

However, it would have the great merit of not caring whether your enhanced
haematocrit was caused by physical apparatus (an altitude tent) or
chemical apparatus (EPO). I find those athletes who rail against 'drug
cheats' while using altitude tents nauseatingly hypocritical.


I just call them unable to live in the mountains.

Ron

Caroline May 31st 07 01:59 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 

"Simon Brooke" wrote in message
...
in message Akl6i.2128$9G3.1906@trnddc07, Caroline
') wrote:

For all of these drugs there are easy blood tests to show whether they
are in balance, or "within normal limits." Soooo.... Wouldn't it be so
much easier simply to collect pre-race blood samples from all the
athletes and have them analyzed for whatever may be outside normal
limits? Simply announce that if your blood does not meet "race
standards" you will be disqualified. Period. Then who cares if people
take EPOs? If they take enough to give them an unfair edge, they're out
of the game!


I instinctively dislike your idea, but it does have merits.

I dislike it because it might unfairly penalise people who through
perfectly natural accidents of genetics has parameters which are outside
your 'normal limits' - and, indeed, might penalise them even if their
genetic peculiarity were not 'performance enhancing'. Such a person might
never be able to compete, because it might be impossible to get their body
tuned within the 'normal limits' which had been defined.


And we all know there must be at least 250,000 cyclists world wide who fall
into this category, right? '-)

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully, there
must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal. If someone can
document that they have a rare condition, an exception could be made.



However, it would have the great merit of not caring whether your enhanced
haematocrit was caused by physical apparatus (an altitude tent) or
chemical apparatus (EPO). I find those athletes who rail against 'drug
cheats' while using altitude tents nauseatingly hypocritical.


Well, not so much. You don't inject altitude tents into your body. But
maybe I'm unaware of the latest trends?

Caroline



Sandy May 31st 07 02:06 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
Dans le message de news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully,
there must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal. If
someone can document that they have a rare condition, an exception
could be made.


Google "Santhi Soundarajan" and see how natural rare conditions are treated
by the IOC.

--
Sandy

Ce n'est pas que j'ai peur de la mort.
Je veux seulement ne pas être là
quand elle arrivera.



Caroline May 31st 07 03:55 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"Curtis L. Russell" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 27 May 2007 19:53:04 GMT, "Caroline"
wrote:

For all of these drugs there are easy blood tests to show whether they are
in balance, or "within normal limits." Soooo.... Wouldn't it be so much
easier simply to collect pre-race blood samples from all the athletes and
have them analyzed for whatever may be outside normal limits? Simply
announce that if your blood does not meet "race standards" you will be
disqualified. Period. Then who cares if people take EPOs? If they take
enough to give them an unfair edge, they're out of the game!


For all of the drugs? Some of the tests take three days if the lab is
ready for them. Most take several hours at a minimum because the
machinery necessary to make all testing equal has to be set up first
(single assay testing in lots of over 100 isn't a great way to prep
for the later legal battles), followed by the actual testing. You'd
still be disqualifying people hours and days after the day's racing.



I'm not following how this relates to a "normal limits" overall blood
profile.



FWIW, it still won't be cheap - some test kits - if you do all the
drugs - will cost you in the hundreds for the kit alone, if done in
batches. That will be for one drug in some cases, per person...

Curtis L. Russell
Odenton, MD (USA)
Just someone on two wheels...



Would it be absolutely neccessary to test *every* rider? I don't think so.
There would have to be a margin that would test any riders who might slip in
as top finishers late in the game, but no reason to test all.

My primary point is that there has to be a better way than what's happening
now.

Caroline




Caroline May 31st 07 08:54 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 

"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully,
there must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal. If
someone can document that they have a rare condition, an exception
could be made.


Google "Santhi Soundarajan" and see how natural rare conditions are
treated by the IOC.

--
Sandy

Ce n'est pas que j'ai peur de la mort.
Je veux seulement ne pas être là
quand elle arrivera.



'-) LOL! And there are how many transgender competitors in cylcing? I
*probably* wouldn't have much of a problem with a female to male competitor
competing with males, but a male to female competing with females could have
an unfair edge. Just my guess.

Caroliine



Sandy May 31st 07 08:59 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
Dans le message de news:2KF7i.6538$XC3.500@trnddc04,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :
"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully,
there must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal.
If someone can document that they have a rare condition, an
exception could be made.


Google "Santhi Soundarajan" and see how natural rare conditions are
treated by the IOC.

--
Sandy

Ce n'est pas que j'ai peur de la mort.
Je veux seulement ne pas être là
quand elle arrivera.



'-) LOL! And there are how many transgender competitors in cylcing?
I *probably* wouldn't have much of a problem with a female to male
competitor competing with males, but a male to female competing with
females could have an unfair edge. Just my guess.

Caroliine


You didn't read enough, Caroline. She is not transgendered.



Tom Kunich May 31st 07 11:58 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"Caroline" wrote in message
news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06...

"Simon Brooke" wrote in message
...
in message Akl6i.2128$9G3.1906@trnddc07, Caroline
') wrote:

For all of these drugs there are easy blood tests to show whether they
are in balance, or "within normal limits." Soooo.... Wouldn't it be so
much easier simply to collect pre-race blood samples from all the
athletes and have them analyzed for whatever may be outside normal
limits? Simply announce that if your blood does not meet "race
standards" you will be disqualified. Period. Then who cares if people
take EPOs? If they take enough to give them an unfair edge, they're out
of the game!


I instinctively dislike your idea, but it does have merits.

I dislike it because it might unfairly penalise people who through
perfectly natural accidents of genetics has parameters which are outside
your 'normal limits' - and, indeed, might penalise them even if their
genetic peculiarity were not 'performance enhancing'. Such a person might
never be able to compete, because it might be impossible to get their
body
tuned within the 'normal limits' which had been defined.


And we all know there must be at least 250,000 cyclists world wide who
fall into this category, right? '-)

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully, there
must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal. If someone
can document that they have a rare condition, an exception could be made.

However, it would have the great merit of not caring whether your
enhanced
haematocrit was caused by physical apparatus (an altitude tent) or
chemical apparatus (EPO). I find those athletes who rail against 'drug
cheats' while using altitude tents nauseatingly hypocritical.


Well, not so much. You don't inject altitude tents into your body. But
maybe I'm unaware of the latest trends?


Quit being logical Caroline. What Simon is saying is that it is OK for teams
to train at high altitude and acquire all the benefits of such training but
it is artificially incorrect to sleep in a hypoxia tent for 25% of the cost.
That way we can guarantee that only the largest teams with the best laid
plans can hope to field the strongest riders.




Tom Kunich June 1st 07 12:04 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:2KF7i.6538$XC3.500@trnddc04,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :
"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully,
there must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal.
If someone can document that they have a rare condition, an
exception could be made.

Google "Santhi Soundarajan" and see how natural rare conditions are
treated by the IOC.

--
Sandy

Ce n'est pas que j'ai peur de la mort.
Je veux seulement ne pas être là
quand elle arrivera.



'-) LOL! And there are how many transgender competitors in cylcing?
I *probably* wouldn't have much of a problem with a female to male
competitor competing with males, but a male to female competing with
females could have an unfair edge. Just my guess.

Caroliine


You didn't read enough, Caroline. She is not transgendered.


She is, however, a case that would require special dispensation - a genetic
man who never developed into either a man or a woman due to a known medical
condition in which the body doesn't respond to testosterone in early
childhood.

What is important is that Santhi has all of the physical capacity OF A WOMAN
because the testosterone she produces cannot be used by her body. She should
be given a special case dispensation by the sports authorities.



RonSonic June 1st 07 12:50 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
On Thu, 31 May 2007 19:54:38 GMT, "Caroline" wrote:


"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully,
there must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal. If
someone can document that they have a rare condition, an exception
could be made.


Google "Santhi Soundarajan" and see how natural rare conditions are
treated by the IOC.

--
Sandy

Ce n'est pas que j'ai peur de la mort.
Je veux seulement ne pas être là
quand elle arrivera.



'-) LOL! And there are how many transgender competitors in cylcing? I
*probably* wouldn't have much of a problem with a female to male competitor
competing with males, but a male to female competing with females could have
an unfair edge. Just my guess.


The only one I'm aware of is the Canadian downhill MTB champ.

I'm sure that miserable creature has all sorts of problems in life, but my
sympathy / pity doesn't extend to allowing her to ruin women's sports.

Ron

Caroline June 1st 07 02:01 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"Tom Kunich" cyclintom@yahoo. com wrote in message
link.net...
"Caroline" wrote in message
news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06...

"Simon Brooke" wrote in message
...
in message Akl6i.2128$9G3.1906@trnddc07, Caroline
') wrote:

For all of these drugs there are easy blood tests to show whether they
are in balance, or "within normal limits." Soooo.... Wouldn't it be so
much easier simply to collect pre-race blood samples from all the
athletes and have them analyzed for whatever may be outside normal
limits? Simply announce that if your blood does not meet "race
standards" you will be disqualified. Period. Then who cares if people
take EPOs? If they take enough to give them an unfair edge, they're out
of the game!

I instinctively dislike your idea, but it does have merits.

I dislike it because it might unfairly penalise people who through
perfectly natural accidents of genetics has parameters which are outside
your 'normal limits' - and, indeed, might penalise them even if their
genetic peculiarity were not 'performance enhancing'. Such a person
might
never be able to compete, because it might be impossible to get their
body
tuned within the 'normal limits' which had been defined.


And we all know there must be at least 250,000 cyclists world wide who
fall into this category, right? '-)

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully, there
must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal. If someone
can document that they have a rare condition, an exception could be made.

However, it would have the great merit of not caring whether your
enhanced
haematocrit was caused by physical apparatus (an altitude tent) or
chemical apparatus (EPO). I find those athletes who rail against 'drug
cheats' while using altitude tents nauseatingly hypocritical.


Well, not so much. You don't inject altitude tents into your body. But
maybe I'm unaware of the latest trends?


Quit being logical Caroline. What Simon is saying is that it is OK for
teams to train at high altitude and acquire all the benefits of such
training but it is artificially incorrect to sleep in a hypoxia tent for
25% of the cost. That way we can guarantee that only the largest teams
with the best laid plans can hope to field the strongest riders.



I fully understand what Simon is saying, and "logic" has nothing to do with
it. The problem is with the tacit approval of altitude tents that came from
the IOC when they allowed coaches to modify dorms/housing to give cyclists
an altitude edge during the games in Japan. I objected at the time that
they were opening a can of worms, and so they have. The problem is that
once worms get out and start burrowing, it's damned hard to catch them all
and put them back.

But the fact remains that there is, in my opinion, a huge difference between
doing something to force your body to adapt and perform better using the
body's own natural adpative mechanisms and putting chemicals inside your
body to accomplish the same goal.

Caroline



Caroline June 1st 07 02:09 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:2KF7i.6538$XC3.500@trnddc04,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :
"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully,
there must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal.
If someone can document that they have a rare condition, an
exception could be made.

Google "Santhi Soundarajan" and see how natural rare conditions are
treated by the IOC.

--
Sandy

Ce n'est pas que j'ai peur de la mort.
Je veux seulement ne pas être là
quand elle arrivera.



'-) LOL! And there are how many transgender competitors in cylcing?
I *probably* wouldn't have much of a problem with a female to male
competitor competing with males, but a male to female competing with
females could have an unfair edge. Just my guess.

Caroliine


You didn't read enough, Caroline. She is not transgendered.



Sorry. "Transgendered" seemed as good a word choice as "hermaphrodite" or
"chromasomally challenged." Whatever label is used, she is an anomally.
The problem appears to be that the gender test is not universally
administered, so why is she subjected to it when there doesn't appear to be
(in my opinion) enough collective information to show what the "normal
limits" are? But then, where is it written that life is fair?

Caroline



Caroline June 1st 07 02:16 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"RonSonic" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 31 May 2007 19:54:38 GMT, "Caroline"
wrote:


"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed successfully,
there must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to appeal. If
someone can document that they have a rare condition, an exception
could be made.

Google "Santhi Soundarajan" and see how natural rare conditions are
treated by the IOC.

--
Sandy

Ce n'est pas que j'ai peur de la mort.
Je veux seulement ne pas être là
quand elle arrivera.



'-) LOL! And there are how many transgender competitors in cylcing? I
*probably* wouldn't have much of a problem with a female to male
competitor
competing with males, but a male to female competing with females could
have
an unfair edge. Just my guess.


The only one I'm aware of is the Canadian downhill MTB champ.

I'm sure that miserable creature has all sorts of problems in life, but my
sympathy / pity doesn't extend to allowing her to ruin women's sports.

Ron



Don't forget Renee Richards in tennis. But then, tennis seems a bit less
uptight than a lot of other sports.

Caroline



meb[_3_] June 1st 07 06:42 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 

Tom Kunich Wrote:
"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:2KF7i.6538$XC3.500@trnddc04,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :
"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed

successfully,
there must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to

appeal.
If someone can document that they have a rare condition, an
exception could be made.

Google "Santhi Soundarajan" and see how natural rare conditions

are
treated by the IOC.

--
Sandy

Ce n'est pas que j'ai peur de la mort.
Je veux seulement ne pas être là
quand elle arrivera.


'-) LOL! And there are how many transgender competitors in

cylcing?
I *probably* wouldn't have much of a problem with a female to male
competitor competing with males, but a male to female competing

with
females could have an unfair edge. Just my guess.

Caroliine


You didn't read enough, Caroline. She is not transgendered.


She is, however, a case that would require special dispensation - a
genetic
man who never developed into either a man or a woman due to a known
medical
condition in which the body doesn't respond to testosterone in early
childhood.

What is important is that Santhi has all of the physical capacity OF A
WOMAN
because the testosterone she produces cannot be used by her body. She
should
be given a special case dispensation by the sports authorities.


Sounds like she isn't a "genetic man" either. As best I understand it
she is XXYY although one story believes XXY.

Has the IOC itself addressed this issue or merely the Olympic Council
of Asia?


--
meb


Ryan Cousineau June 1st 07 06:55 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
In article ,
meb wrote:

Tom Kunich Wrote:
"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:2KF7i.6538$XC3.500@trnddc04,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :
"Sandy" wrote in message
...
Dans le message de news:KEz7i.1902$d63.1325@trnddc06,
Caroline a réfléchi, et puis a déclaré :

Seriously, if *any* control measures are to be placed

successfully,
there must be ways for those who fall outside the norms to

appeal.
If someone can document that they have a rare condition, an
exception could be made.

Google "Santhi Soundarajan" and see how natural rare conditions

are
treated by the IOC.

--
Sandy

Ce n'est pas que j'ai peur de la mort.
Je veux seulement ne pas être là
quand elle arrivera.


'-) LOL! And there are how many transgender competitors in

cylcing?
I *probably* wouldn't have much of a problem with a female to male
competitor competing with males, but a male to female competing

with
females could have an unfair edge. Just my guess.

Caroliine

You didn't read enough, Caroline. She is not transgendered.


She is, however, a case that would require special dispensation - a
genetic
man who never developed into either a man or a woman due to a known
medical
condition in which the body doesn't respond to testosterone in early
childhood.

What is important is that Santhi has all of the physical capacity OF A
WOMAN
because the testosterone she produces cannot be used by her body. She
should
be given a special case dispensation by the sports authorities.


Sounds like she isn't a "genetic man" either. As best I understand it
she is XXYY although one story believes XXY.

Has the IOC itself addressed this issue or merely the Olympic Council
of Asia?


Considering that the IOC has now ruled that M-to-F transsexuals can now
compete as women as long as their surgery was at least two years ago and
they maintain their hormone therapy, I can't see how they would possibly
DQ Santhi.

I'm telling you: gender-neutral handicapped competition is the future of
cycling!

--
Ryan Cousineau http://www.wiredcola.com/
"I don't want kids who are thinking about going into mathematics
to think that they have to take drugs to succeed." -Paul Erdos

Simon Brooke June 1st 07 10:05 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
in message .net, Tom
Kunich ('cyclintom@yahoo. com') wrote:

However, it would have the great merit of not caring whether your
enhanced
haematocrit was caused by physical apparatus (an altitude tent) or
chemical apparatus (EPO). I find those athletes who rail against 'drug
cheats' while using altitude tents nauseatingly hypocritical.


Well, not so much. Â*You don't inject altitude tents into your body. Â*But
maybe I'm unaware of the latest trends?


Quit being logical Caroline. What Simon is saying is that it is OK for
teams to train at high altitude and acquire all the benefits of such
training but it is artificially incorrect to sleep in a hypoxia tent for
25% of the cost. That way we can guarantee that only the largest teams
with the best laid plans can hope to field the strongest riders.


********.

The benefits of training at high altitude last only a few days when you get
back down to low altitude. So it may help people at a one day
track-and-field event (or, to be fair, a crit) but it makes absolutely
zero difference to the outcome of a stage race. In any case, Caroline's
suggestion would also penalise those who trained at high altitude - any
artificial means of increasing haematocrit.

If EPO is cheating, then hypoxia tents are cheating. If hypoxia tents
aren't cheating, then EPO isn't cheating. They're just alternative ways of
achieving precisely the same result.

--
(Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/

I shall continue to be an impossible person so long as those
who are now possible remain possible -- Michael Bakunin



Donald Munro June 1st 07 04:04 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
Ryan Cousineau wrote:
I'm telling you: gender-neutral handicapped competition is the future of
cycling!


Well try cutting of the relevant components and then get back to us with a
race report.

[email protected] June 1st 07 07:41 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
Here's a clue - the phoney "blood test" that they supposedly ran in France
with Lance's blood that they claimed contained EPO showed a hematocrit of
38%.


Please give the source for this.


Tom Kunich June 2nd 07 10:26 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
wrote in message
ups.com...
Here's a clue - the phoney "blood test" that they supposedly ran in
France
with Lance's blood that they claimed contained EPO showed a hematocrit of
38%.


Please give the source for this.


I can't remember the source. It was part of the report that they provided
when they did that claimed EPO test from 1999. Somewhere in there they'd
gotten a blood test for Armstrong and it was 38%. Of course they didn't
advertise that because it makes the EPO claim look pretty silly.



Tom Kunich June 2nd 07 10:29 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"meb" wrote in message
...

Sounds like she isn't a "genetic man" either. As best I understand it
she is XXYY although one story believes XXY.


As far as I know there are special cases of XXY and XYY but Santhi is
neither. She is an XY that never developed into a man because of a natural
allergy to testosterone.

Has the IOC itself addressed this issue or merely the Olympic Council
of Asia?


Placing reality in front of committees is sort of like putting a mirror in
front of a vampire - they will do almost anything to avoid addressing the
problems.



Tom Kunich June 2nd 07 10:40 PM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
"Simon Brooke" wrote in message
...
in message .net, Tom
Kunich ('cyclintom@yahoo. com') wrote:

However, it would have the great merit of not caring whether your
enhanced
haematocrit was caused by physical apparatus (an altitude tent) or
chemical apparatus (EPO). I find those athletes who rail against 'drug
cheats' while using altitude tents nauseatingly hypocritical.

Well, not so much. You don't inject altitude tents into your body. But
maybe I'm unaware of the latest trends?


Quit being logical Caroline. What Simon is saying is that it is OK for
teams to train at high altitude and acquire all the benefits of such
training but it is artificially incorrect to sleep in a hypoxia tent for
25% of the cost. That way we can guarantee that only the largest teams
with the best laid plans can hope to field the strongest riders.


********.

The benefits of training at high altitude last only a few days when you
get
back down to low altitude.


Actually they last the lifetime of a Red Blood Cell or thereabouts - about 3
months.

So it may help people at a one day
track-and-field event (or, to be fair, a crit) but it makes absolutely
zero difference to the outcome of a stage race.


Sorry Simon but you don't understand the mechanism very well. Altitude
causes an adatation by the body to maintain an exygen level in the body's
cells. It causes a couple of things to happen - one is that the number of
red blood cells increase, another is something they haven't gotten a handle
on yet - people who train at altitude don't generate nearly as much lactic
acid. And red blood cells somehow become more efficient at carrying oxygen
as well.

All in all it's pretty effective training though using hyperbaric chambers
works slightly better - not physically but the speed at which you get to
high altitude fitness.

If EPO is cheating, then hypoxia tents are cheating. If hypoxia tents
aren't cheating, then EPO isn't cheating. They're just alternative ways of
achieving precisely the same result.


Can't say I agree with you Simon. EPO is a naturally occurring hormone in
the body. Enhancing that chemically is both unenthical and medically
dangerous. As Pantani demonstrated on a couple of occasions, he was pumping
so much EPO into himself that his body shut off all production of it and he
then went into a tailspin with his hematocrit hitting 12% at one point - why
he wasn't dead only means that his personal doctors starting giving him
transfussions until his body reasserted itself.

Altitude chambers are the poor man's way to train at altitude. Mind you, I
don't like either, but if you allow one you should allow the other.



Curtis L. Russell June 6th 07 01:35 AM

A more reasonable way of EPO testing
 
On Thu, 31 May 2007 14:55:29 GMT, "Caroline"
wrote:


Would it be absolutely neccessary to test *every* rider? I don't think so.
There would have to be a margin that would test any riders who might slip in
as top finishers late in the game, but no reason to test all.


And so when you said exactly one post ago that it would be easier to
collect and analyze the blood from 'all athletes', you didn't mean
every rider? Or are you arguing that 'every rider' is a larger set
than 'all athletes'? BTW, this is fine - it is known here as the KG
Master Fattie argument, but you need to try to be clear about that up
front.


Curtis L. Russell
Odenton, MD (USA)
Just someone on two wheels...


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