Showing posts with label Performance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Performance. Show all posts

Blood Doping for Boosting Exercise Performance

Thursday, October 13, 2011

As with any athletic event focusing on the extremes of human exercise performance, the Winter Olympics have allowed the ugly head of cheating in sport to rise again. Recently, police raided the Austrian ski team's residences in Torino on suspicion of blood doping to improve athletic performance. What is blood doping anyway and how does it improve athletic performance? This article provides some basic information on blood doping, explains the mechanisms for its ability to greatly improve exercise performance and provides pros and cons for it's use.

Doping in sports

Sports Fitness

Although the word hints at a relationship, doping actually has nothing to do with "dope" (the street word for marijuana). If this were the case, it may be that snowboarders would be under investigation instead of skiers!

Doping for exercise performance improvement refers specifically to "blood doping" - a means of cheating by artificially boosting red blood cell counts.

The doping procedure works like this:

A doctor draws up to 4 units (about 4 pints) of blood from the athlete's body - essentially making him/her anemic (low blood cell count)

The withdrawn blood is then centrifuged (spun very quickly) to separate the red blood cells (RBCs) from the other main component of blood - plasma.

The athlete's RBCs are "stored" under refrigerated conditions (the shelf life of RBCs is about 40 days)

The anemic condition stimulates the athlete's body to increase production and release of a hormone called EPO (erythropoietin)

EPO stimulates the replenishing of the "lost" RBCs

The athlete is given about 4 weeks to fully replenish their RBC count to pre-drawing levels

The athlete's stored RBCs are then re-infused into the athlete's body, boosting the RBC level higher

Why do athletes participate in blood doping and what is the logic behind it?

Quite simply - blood doping can quite significantly improve performance in long duration, endurance-type exercise such as cross-country skiing, skating and running.

The logic for its use it to boost the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood above normal levels providing more oxygen to the working muscles - allowing for a greater power output and a decreased susceptibility to fatigue.

RBCs contain a protein called hemoglobin - the primary "transporter" of oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body including the working muscles. So if you boost the number of RBCs you also boost the amount of "available" hemoglobin to bind and deliver oxygen.

The pros to blood doping use:

It is highly effective and is estimated to improve endurance exercise performance at the elite level by about 4%

It boosts VO2 max (maximal oxygen uptake) and reduces lactate buildup

The ergogenic (exercise performance boosting) effect with blood doping is immediate, making it ideal for a pre-main event performance - making pre-event detection more difficult

It may be easier to regulate hematocrit (percent composition RBCs of total blood volume) - a tightly regulated ceiling is placed on this value and is used for detection of both blood doping (and EPO use)

It probably decreases the perception of effort during exercise allowing for improved performance

The cons to blood doping use:

The blood doping process is quite laborious and quite severely decreases the training capacity of the athlete in the first few weeks after blood donation as the athlete is essentially anemic and cannot exercise as hard.

1. Health risks

With the increase in hematocrit the heart needs to work much harder to pump the higher viscosity blood - increasing the risk of overload damage to the heart such as myocardial infarct (heart attack)

There is an increased risk of developing life-threatening blood clots (stroke, heart attack, lung clot)

Blood doping involves transfusion using needles and sometimes donor blood, so there is a greater risk of infections such as hepatitis A and B and even AIDS

Since the athlete's RBCs are externally stored, there is a greater risk to the athlete if this has been done incorrectly (e.g. storage at the incorrect temperature, tampering, confusion/mislabeling)

2. Status risks

Detection of the use of blood doping may defile the athlete's reputation

Detection may result in him or her being banned from competition, as sport regulating agencies such as the IOC and several cycling governing bodies strictly forbid it.

Actually, blood doping in sports has become less popular recently due to the increased availability of recombinant erythropoietin (rEPO) which as explained in an article on this website produces exactly the same effect as blood doping but is easier, less riskier and more effective (boosts endurance performance by about 6%).

In conclusion, this article has shown that although blood doping and rEPO may quite significantly boost endurance exercise performance, it carries with it risks to the athlete's health and status. It is unfortunate, but with increases in modern technology and molecular biology, it is likely that even these forms of "cheating" will someday be replaced with safer and less detectable methods.

Blood Doping for Boosting Exercise Performance

Improving Performance in Sports

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Clenbuterol is a drug very popular weight loss between the rich and famous, but the use of clenbuterol in the sport is generally accepted. Both athletes and bodybuilders, I'm happy for many reasons. Two of the main reasons for this are as follows ...

Rapid weight loss

Sports Fitness

Many athletes have switched on and off seasons, and are above the demands of their weight when it's time for the next season, the train arrives. Clenbuterol causes a rapid and substantial weight loss, so it's perfectto be used in these situations. It is not necessary for the effective use of clenbuterol in the diet, in fact, one could say the opposite! It produces effective weight loss so powerful, because it significantly increases the metabolic rate. It causes the body to burn quickly through fat and protein so that it proposed to add more protein to your normal diet.

Jump Start Performance

The use of clenbuterol in sport is also popular because it is recognized by an increase in total investmentForce. Every athlete and bodybuilders may benefit from an increase in muscle power! It 'also known to influence your resistance, giving the extra mile, no wear to go with the same ease.

If you are using Clenbuterol should be taken up there for only 4-6 weeks before a break. Should always be at least a couple of weeks between cycles. How long is your cycle will use its metabolism and the reasons for it. If weight lossYour goal, then 4-6 weeks, as mentioned above should be suitable. However, if you build more lean towards an increase in strength, you must use shorter cycles. Clenbuterol seems to refer to power for a shorter period, about three to four weeks.

Determine what uses are important to you and carefully plan your cycles. If you are ready to begin, you should start with small doses of 20mcg tablets. Every few days add another pill to yourDose, up to his ideal dosage, usually 80-120mcg per day. At the end of the cycle is necessary to reduce the dose gradually until you are finally on anything else. Take a couple of weeks before starting again.

Either way you choose to take, you are almost sure to see the effectiveness of the use of clenbuterol in the sport.

Improving Performance in Sports