- Jul 27, 2010
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Re:
Have a link? If his adjusted reading was 1429, then his USG was 1.028. I was wondering what it was, and if it would help him. It does. He could now use the corrected figure, together with the theoretical study, to argue that there is some probability--5%?--of his urine level if he inhaled 800 ug in the last hour of the stage. Also, the data in the literature might show a value that low for 800 ug. I need to check that. Still a stretch, but better for him than 2000 ng/ml.
Edit: Still doesn't look good for him. In five studies of subjects inhaling 800 ug, only 4/344 samples were > 1000 ng/ml, and only 1 was > 1200 ng/ml. That sample was 1387 ng/ml, but only as a result of correction of a raw value of around 560 ng/ml. The subject had very dilute urine, which can result in a very large correction factor.
I have a better idea of why the case is taking so long, though. The 1429 ng/ml level is close enough to the decision limit that Froome's team is probably arguing for some other factors to push it down a little more.
bigcog said:According to Times article about this new study and Froome's case, Froome's adjusted reading was 1429ng/mL under the new WADA rules. Dr Rabin science director of WADA has read Leiden paper and says WADA will defend it's current threshold and they have also done their own tests in preparation for Froome's case.
Have a link? If his adjusted reading was 1429, then his USG was 1.028. I was wondering what it was, and if it would help him. It does. He could now use the corrected figure, together with the theoretical study, to argue that there is some probability--5%?--of his urine level if he inhaled 800 ug in the last hour of the stage. Also, the data in the literature might show a value that low for 800 ug. I need to check that. Still a stretch, but better for him than 2000 ng/ml.
Edit: Still doesn't look good for him. In five studies of subjects inhaling 800 ug, only 4/344 samples were > 1000 ng/ml, and only 1 was > 1200 ng/ml. That sample was 1387 ng/ml, but only as a result of correction of a raw value of around 560 ng/ml. The subject had very dilute urine, which can result in a very large correction factor.
I have a better idea of why the case is taking so long, though. The 1429 ng/ml level is close enough to the decision limit that Froome's team is probably arguing for some other factors to push it down a little more.
