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Perspectives in the Utilisation of Fourier-transform Infrared Spectroscopy of Serum in Sports Medicine: Health Monitoring of Athletes and Prevention of Doping

Overview
Journal Sports Med
Specialty Orthopedics
Date 2000 Jun 28
PMID 10870865
Citations 2
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Abstract

Doping prevention is mainly directed to providing information on the dangers of doping to young athletes and to every profession concerned with athletic performance. Unfortunately, repression is also necessary in the fight against doping. Measurement of performance-enhancing drugs is complex, partly because of the large number of prohibited substances. A number of sophisticated analytical techniques are increasingly being used to provide the maximum detection time window. However, the effectiveness of methods to separate exogenous from endogenous biological molecules and the cost of antidoping analyses makes controls invalid or impossible. Moreover, most athletes, because of the metabolic and psychological stresses caused, legitimately refuse blood testing. It is becoming crucial to introduce new methods in the form of longitudinal health monitoring, since this is probably the most effective tool to prevent the use of doping agents when athletes become overtrained and/or overstressed. This paper describes new methods using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy to analyse serum from 50 microl samples of capillary blood. This technique has been shown to allow determination of the concentration of a wide range of biological molecules in a single microsample with clinically useful accuracy, and to provide a 'discriminatory biomolecular profile' to differentiate individuals on the basis of their physiological status. A specific application of this methodology is to perform longitudinal health monitoring in athletes, allowing prevention of overtraining. It is proposed to apply such methods in longitudinal studies for health monitoring and prevention of doping.

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