Doping in NZ...
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Some Dopers cheat in other parts of their life too.
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@mikedogz said in Doping in NZ...:
Some Dopers cheat in other parts of their life too.
She's a disgrace, can't believe they keep using her as the marketing face of the Christchurch Marathon
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Resurrecting this topic for general discussion on PEDs and general doping in sport as I saw this "article" in the Herald and thought it deserved a comment.
It's not exactly PEDs and I read it as I wondered who the "star" was.
It was headlined to seem like there is a major painkiller problem in rugby, but it's pretty obvious that it is nothing more than an advert.
Find this sort of advertising distasteful.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=12299659
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@booboo said in Doping in NZ...:
It was headlined to seem like there is a major painkiller problem in rugby, but it's pretty obvious that it is nothing more than an advert.
Find this sort of advertising distasteful.I saw that too and it is complete bollocks. I wonder if he actually paid to have that "article" written / published?
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Saw this paper today, which I thought was pretty interesting.
Using liposomes (lipid bilayer particles) to encapsulate haemoglobin for continuous release. Would increase haemoglobin availability (for oxygen carrying), while potentially not exceeding doping thresholds.
Haemoglobin delivered by liposome vesicles (liposome‐encapsulated haemoglobins, LEHs), first proposed as blood substitutes nearly 30 years ago,13 are a particular subclass of artificial oxygen carriers currently in preclinical development and represent a potential breakthrough in the field of blood substitutes.14-16 The long circulating liposome‐based drug delivery system, thanks to the presence of poly(ethylene glycol) derivatized phospholipids, allows for a prolonged delivery of oxygen to the tissues and reduced immunogenicity.17-19
Apart from their multiple clinical applications and promising therapeutic utility, LEHs, as well as other HBOCs, could in principle also be misused in sport doping practice, with the specific aim to increase the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood.20, 21 As such, they fall into category ‘M1 – Manipulation of Blood and Blood Components’ of the WADA list of prohibited substances and methods, which covers not only blood transfusions, but also, specifically, HBOCs, in Subsection 2: ‘Artificially enhancing the uptake, transport or delivery of oxygen. Including, but not limited to perfluorochemicals; efaproxiral (RSR13) and modified haemoglobin products, e.g. haemoglobin‐based blood substitutes and microencapsulated haemoglobin products, excluding supplemental oxygen’.9
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@Tim the science will just keep pushing on. I watch a fair bit of weightlifting and powerlifting content and people are def trying new stuff in that arena. At least they have options for clean v not unlike athletics etc. But Olympic weightlifting is def battling hard out doping, kind of like cycling where it's a matter of when, rather than if, people will get found out.
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@Paekakboyz said in Doping in NZ...:
@Tim the science will just keep pushing on. I watch a fair bit of weightlifting and powerlifting content and people are def trying new stuff in that arena. At least they have options for clean v not unlike athletics etc. But Olympic weightlifting is def battling hard out doping, kind of like cycling where it's a matter of when, rather than if, people will get found out.
The dopers are one step ahead
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@canefan or more aye! Although it is interesting that some of the never methods are seemingly less damaging or risky, at least in the weightlifting scene. Aside from putting an unhealthy level of muscle mass on your frame of course!
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@Paekakboyz said in Doping in NZ...:
@canefan or more aye! Although it is interesting that some of the never methods are seemingly less damaging or risky, at least in the weightlifting scene. Aside from putting an unhealthy level of muscle mass on your frame of course!
I guess they need to be increasingly difficult to detect so they need to be more subtle
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@booboo said in Doping in NZ...:
Resurrecting this topic for general discussion on PEDs and general doping in sport as I saw this "article" in the Herald and thought it deserved a comment.
It's not exactly PEDs and I read it as I wondered who the "star" was.
It was headlined to seem like there is a major painkiller problem in rugby, but it's pretty obvious that it is nothing more than an advert.
Find this sort of advertising distasteful.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=12299659
Normally when the Herald whore themselves out to this degree they label it “ sponsored content “ . Pathetic.
Oh yeah “ rugby star” , that’s as laughable as Chris Rattue being “ premium content “.
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@antipodean said in Doping in NZ...:
@jegga What I like most is not that the majority of fans wouldn't be able to name him, it's that he's aware of the habits of players after being out of the game for the better part of the decade.
It ties in nicely with the woo thread , is this CBD product you’re shilling FDA approved ?
Nope . It says on its website “lab tested “ its lab tested to make sure there’s no THC in it.
https://puresportcbd.co.uk/about/
Whenever I think of Grayson Hart it won’t be as a “ super rugby star” it’ll be as another snake oil salesmen.