I havent ever drink sangria, sorry, and I didnt drink alcohol in the last three weeks.
Athlete dilutional Seudoanemia
In endurance athletes frequently diagnosed seudoanemia a process known as dilution, which should
differentiate true anemia (usually due to iron deficiency).
The dilution is due to seudoanemia
athletes that increases the amount of plasma, while the cell
remains at normal levels. this
Thus, the relationship RBC / plasma (or
that is, the hematocrit) decreases,
which can be confused with a situation of
true anemia.
It is sometimes difficult to differentiate anemia
true of a dilutional seudoanemia box.
In these cases must procedersecomo iron deficiency anemia if it were, through the continuous supply of iron for at least two months, making a
New Control by blood test
end of treatment: increases in
hemoglobin in at least one gram
per deciliter used to diagnose "a posteriori" that the picture was actually a deficiency anemia
What that man means in that forums it is just a possibility anyway.
For me, i believe in Horner and in currently cycling, at least in the World Tour, but this is not for me an evidence of not doping, it is just an evidence that we are in an era very different to the era of Pantani finishing Giro at 52 or more.
I would like to see more biopassport, and more controls from the past.
And about this:
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/armstrong-probably-clean-in-comeback-damsgaard-claims
“but you have to know when the samples are taken and I think that I know a little more about that than Robin Parisotto does.”
For example, he said, one of the blood tests was done after the finish of the penultimate stage atop the Mont Ventoux -- “15 minutes after suffering through 40° heat. After six hours of racing. It is not a viable test."
That is something we need to know.