thehog said:You have to remember the Landis stuff had come out in May '10.
I would suggest he was watching his step. He did pull out of a number of races that year and his form was all over the place.
mwbyrd said:Novel idea here....instead of doing their job in 2008, they wait until now because public opinion has turned on LA?
This doesn't coincide with what Tygart is spouting these days about fair sport and USADA doing their job. Maybe they should have done this in 2008.
I guess maybe it is all 'Political' after all...
This doesn't coincide with what Tygart is spouting these days about fair sport and USADA doing their job. Maybe they should have done this in 2008.
Scott SoCal said:Boom.
Paddy certainly has some 'splaining to do. No wonder Travis has kept this DB in the dark.
BroDeal said:It looks conclusive to me.
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BroDeal said:It looks conclusive to me.
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ScienceIsCool said:Fascinating data; and I love data. I'm a physicist by trade, and know practically nothing about haematology so I went to the web to see how "normal" these values are.
After looking at that graph of reticulocytes vs hematocrit, I decided that would be a good strating point. How to interpret that? What is usual and what is unusual? Are all those values within an expected range?
Several sources cite Reticulocyte Index as a useful measure. RI = reticulocyte count (%) * Hematocrit / "Normal Hematocrit Value".
The average hematocrit value for Lance Armstrong, based on the 38 samples, is a very normal 42.0%. Calculating his RI, I get:
mean = 0.91%
min = 0.49%
max = 1.49%
Furthermore, 25/38 (66%) samples give an RI <1.0%
According to many online sources (i.e., http://www.fpnotebook.com/hemeonc/lab/RtclcytCnt.htm), a normal RI is from 1-3%. It looks like Lance is a mild sufferer of Reticulocytopenia, or reduced blood cell production. There are a few nasty causes such as aplastic anemia and bone marrow suppression. These seem unlikely considering his seemingly good health.
Unfortunately for clean sport, a major contraindication is blood transfusion. In other words, the low RI can be explained by a blood transfusion. Worringly, the number of <1% samples indicate chronic transfusions over a long time period.
I'm probably missing other major contraindicators though. Any doctors want to chime in?
John Swanson
ScienceIsCool said:Unfortunately for clean sport, a major contraindication is blood transfusion. In other words, the low RI can be explained by a blood transfusion. Worringly, the number of <1% samples indicate chronic transfusions over a long time period.
John Swanson
thehog said:Could you explain this paragraph in more detal? Is this dangerous? To be in a state of constant blood manipulation!
egtalbot said:It may be. But I'm hearing that they asked for the data for several years and didn't get it (note - just from multiple clinic comments, haven't seen any links). Are you specifically disputing that?
mwbyrd said:No, I'm not disputing that WADA and USADA asked for testing information from the UCI. But this is the first I've seen any talk about this situation. But if this is true, why wasn't this front page news? Imagine the headline: UCI refuses to give Drug Test results to WADA/USADA...
DirtyWorks said:There is nothing WADA can request or instigate on their own.
The beauty of the WADA setup is the federation has the all the authority. Based on WADA findings the UCI (or any other federation) can accept or deny requests to open a case as they see fit. It's a one-way relationship with the federation having complete authority. This is by design and allows a free pass to any athlete favored by a federation.
In this case, the data was collected by law enforcement who had the authority to do so, and then passed to USADA. The federation was fortunately completely locked out.
This might not be entirely correct, so please post any useful corrections and details.
egtalbot said:My only question would be that if what you outline is correct, why didn't WADA share the information with USADA in addition to UCI?
BroDeal said:I still think looking at the blood samples as proof of doping is the wrong path. The data will be used to corroborate another rider's (probably Leipheimer's) account of how the team blood doped for the 2009 Tour. For 2010 they will have an account of doping for Flanders.