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A novel mixed living high training low intervention and the hematological module of the athlete biological passport.

Sven Christian VossKhalifa Al-HamadWaseem SamsamAnissa CherifCostas GeorgakopoulosMohammed Al MaadheedGeorge BalanosSam LucasPierre-Edouard SottasMathew WilsonNathan Townsend
Published in: Drug testing and analysis (2019)
Exposure to either natural or simulated hypoxia induces hematological adaptations that may affect the parameters of the Athlete Biological Passport (ABP). The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of a novel, mixed hypoxic dose protocol on the likelihood of producing an atypical ABP finding. Ten well-trained middle-distance runners participated in a "live high, train low and high" (LHTLH) altitude training camp for 14 days. The participants spent ˜6 hr.d-1 at 3000-5400 m during waking hours and ˜10 h.d-1 overnight at 2400-3000 m simulated altitude. Venous blood samples were collected before (B0), and after 1 (D1), 4 (D4), 7 (D7), and 14 (D14) days of hypoxic exposure, and again 14 days post exposure (P14). Samples were analyzed for key parameters of the ABP including reticulocyte percentage (Ret%), hemoglobin concentration ([Hb]), and the OFF-score. The ABP adaptive model was administered at a specificity of 99% to test for atypical findings. We found significant changes in [Hb] and Ret% during the hypoxic intervention. Consequently, this led to ABP threshold deviations at 99% specificity in three participants. Only one of these was flagged as an "atypical passport finding" (ATPF) due to deviation of the OFF-score. When this sample was evaluated by ABP experts it was considered "normal". In conclusion, it is highly unlikely that the present hypoxic exposure protocol would have led to a citation for a doping violation according to WADA guidelines.
Keyphrases
  • randomized controlled trial
  • endothelial cells
  • virtual reality
  • mass spectrometry
  • clinical practice
  • resistance training
  • body composition