Literature DB >> 17163813

Blood transfusions in athletes. Old dogmas, new tricks.

Giuseppe Lippi1, Giuseppe Banfi.   

Abstract

Blood doping consists of any illicit means used to increase and optimize oxygen delivery to the muscles and includes blood transfusions, administration of erythropoiesis-stimulating substances, blood substitutes, natural or artificial altitude facilities, and innovative gene therapies. The use of blood transfusion, an extremely straightforward, practical and effective means of increasing an athlete's red blood-cell supply in advance of competition, became rather popular in the 1970s, but it has suddenly declined following the widespread use of recombinant human erythropoietin among elite endurance athletes. Most recently, following implementation of reliable tests to screen for erythropoiesis-stimulating substances, blood transfusions have made a strong resurgence, as attested by several positive doping tests. Doping by blood transfusion can be classified as homologous, where the blood is infused into someone other than the donor, and autologous, where the blood donor and transfusion recipient are the same. The former case produces more clinically relevant side effects, but is easily detectable using current antidoping protocols based on erythrocyte phenotyping by flow cytometry and, eventually, erythrocyte genotyping by DNA testing. Since the donor and recipient blood are identical in autologous blood doping, this is less risky, though much more challenging to detect. Indirect strategies, relying on significant deviations from individual hematological profiles following autologous blood donation and reinfusion, are currently being investigated. For the time being, the storage of athletes' blood samples to allow testing and sanctioning of guilty athletes once a definitive test has been introduced may represent a reliable deterrent policy.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17163813     DOI: 10.1515/CCLM.2006.262

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Chem Lab Med        ISSN: 1434-6621            Impact factor:   3.694


  7 in total

1.  Tour de chaos.

Authors:  Giuseppe Lippi; Massimo Franchini; Gian Cesare Guidi
Journal:  Br J Sports Med       Date:  2007-06-11       Impact factor: 13.800

2.  Intermittent hypoxic training: doping or what?

Authors:  Giuseppe Lippi; Massimo Franchini
Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol       Date:  2009-09-16       Impact factor: 3.078

3.  Ex vivo erythrocyte generation and blood doping.

Authors:  Giovanni Lombardi; Giuseppe Banfi; Giuseppe Lippi; Fabian Sanchis-Gomar
Journal:  Blood Transfus       Date:  2012-10-10       Impact factor: 3.443

4.  Red blood cell populations and membrane levels of peroxiredoxin 2 as candidate biomarkers to reveal blood doping.

Authors:  Cristina Marrocco; Valeria Pallotta; Angelo D'alessandro; Gilda Alves; Lello Zolla
Journal:  Blood Transfus       Date:  2012-05       Impact factor: 3.443

5.  Untargeted Metabolomics Identifies a Novel Panel of Markers for Autologous Blood Transfusion.

Authors:  Amna Al-Nesf; Nada Mohamed-Ali; Vanessa Acquaah; Maneera Al-Jaber; Maryam Al-Nesf; Mohamed A Yassin; Nelson N Orie; Sven Christian Voss; Costas Georgakopoulos; Rikesh Bhatt; Alka Beotra; Vidya Mohamed-Ali; Mohammed Al-Maadheed
Journal:  Metabolites       Date:  2022-05-10

6.  Autologous Blood Doping Induced Changes in Red Blood Cell Rheologic Parameters, RBC Age Distribution, and Performance.

Authors:  Marijke Grau; Emily Zollmann; Janina Bros; Benedikt Seeger; Thomas Dietz; Javier Antonio Noriega Ureña; Andreas Grolle; Jonas Zacher; Hannah L Notbohm; Garnet Suck; Wilhelm Bloch; Moritz Schumann
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-23

7.  Assessment of Blood Transfusion Utilization and Patient Outcomes at Yekatit-12 Hospital, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

Authors:  Haymanot Tewabe; Asaye Mitiku; Habtamu Worku
Journal:  J Blood Med       Date:  2022-03-29
  7 in total

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