- Jul 27, 2010
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thehog said:Salbutamol is often used if a patient reacts poorly to a blood transfusion via a nebulizer whether a asthmatic or not.
In the scenario outlined by hog, salbutamol is given during a transfusion. For a rider like Froome, the transfusion could take place under two circumstances. The first possibility is during the course of a withdrawal-transfusion cycle, in which case the rider would have excreted all the salbutamol by the time, several weeks later, that he withdrew blood again. So the transfused blood would not have had any significant amount of salbutamol in it. We can discard this possibility as having any relevance to Froome’s situation.
The second possibility is much more interesting and relevant. In this scenario, Froome would take the salbutamol while he was transfusing during the Vuelta. This has nothing to do with transfused blood having salbutamol, it’s basically just a reason why Froome might have taken far more salbutamol than the allowed amount. But it’s very interesting, because it possibly explains why Froome was so far over the limit, just this one time. He took a relatively massive dose of salbutamol because of a bad reaction to a blood transfusion.
This scenario does require that he transfused right before stage 18, though, rather than on a rest day, which I think makes it somewhat unlikely. At the earliest, he might have transfused the night before the stage, loading up his system with enough salbutamol to exceed the threshold the following afternoon when he was tested post-stage. But most of the salbutamol would have been excreted by then. I think the only way to make this scenario work is to hypothesize that Froome was still feeling the bad effects of the transfusion the following morning, before the stage, and so continued to take large doses of salbutamol.
Djoop said:Much like the rather absurd notion that the 'dilution factor' somehow excludes transfusion, these false appeals from authority are far from convincing.
It's not a matter of appealing to authority, the math was shown upthread. The pharmacokinetics of salbutamol are described here:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1401185/pdf/brjclinpharm00122-0093.pdf
Note that the volume of distribution is about 150 liters, or 30 times the volume of blood. IOW, when blood containing salbutamol is transfused, the drug is diluted into a very large volume.
 
				
		 
			 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
		
		 
		
		 
 
		 
 
		 
		
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
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