Memorandum To:
ANZ Championship General Managers, Team Operations Managers, Physiotherapists, Team
Date: 29 April 2011 From: Natalie Wright-Boyd GM High Performance
The information below has been provided by Mary Toomey, Wel being Manager fol owing the news
today that an aspiring AFL athlete has been found to be guilty of an ADRV (Anti-doping rule violation)
due to the ingestion of sufficient Sudafed tablets to take his level of pseudoephedrine beyond the
threshold level allowed for athletes in competition and has been suspended for 2 years.
The news article related to this story can be read by clicking on the fol owing link.
Pseudoephedrine was re-introduced to the WADA list at the end of 2009 and is prohibited above 150 micrograms per millilitre, in an athlete’s urine sample for in-competition testing. This al ows for the therapeutic use of pseudoephedrine containing medications, but sets a limit at the point beyond which the medication is believed to have performance enhancing capacities. The ASADA website very clearly advises athletes not to take medications containing pseudoephedrine for 24 hours prior to or during competition, to avoid the risk of an inadvertent doping offence.
The problem that athletes face with regard to substances such as pseudoephedrine is that it is
contained in many over the counter cold and flu medications and they need to be extremely diligent
when taking such medications. The most common of these related to sport (in part because of its known
use as a performance enhancing agent in the past) is Sudafed. However, not every Sudafed medication
contains pseudoephedrine, which means that athletes cannot just buy and take it without checking first
whether that particular product is allowed.
How a substance comes to be prohibited
For a substance or method to be prohibited, it must meet two of the fol owing three conditions
1. The substance or method has the potential to enhance, or does enhance performance in sport
2. The substance or method has the potential to risk the athlete’s health
3. The substance or method is deemed to violate the spirit of sport
Every athlete is responsible for the substances that enter their body. Athletes are also responsible for any methods they undertake. Ignorance of the WADA code is not al owed as a defence for an athlete competing in a sport where Anti-doping rules apply and where an athlete may be subject to drug testing.
Netbal State MO’s and their member clubs, administrators and athletes are reminded that they can
now access free on-line education regarding their rights and responsibilities under the WADA (World
Anti-doping Authority) code. The ASADA e-learning package can be accessed by clicking on the link
below and then clicking on the ASADA e-learning link at the bottom of the yel ow box on the right.
Subject: Attachments: From: Fourways Equine Clinic <> Your Trainer says “Your horse bleeds!” An explanation – Exercised Induced Pulmonary Haemorrhage. By Dr. Willem LF van Wyk BSc, BVSc Wellness Program Exercise induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH) is a common condition seen often in race Launched! horses where the horse bleeds into the airways following/during wo
Triamterene Kidney Stones FaDI I. Jabr, mD A64-year-old woman with a history of recur-rent kidney stones presented with severe left flank pain radiating to the left lower quadrant of 4 days’ duration. She brought that she had passed in urine. Her medications included hydrochlorothiazide, 25 mg/triamterene, 37.5 mg. An abdominal radiograph ( A ) and a CT scan of the kidneys, ureter