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- Title
Nickel in equine sports drug testing - pilot study results on urinary nickel concentrations.
- Authors
Thevis, M.; Machnik, M.; Schenk, I.; Krug, O.; Piper, T.; Schänzer, W.; Düe, M.; Bondesson, U.; Hedeland, M.
- Abstract
RATIONALE: The issue of illicit performance enhancement spans human and animal sport in presumably equal measure, with prohibited substances and methods of doping conveying both ways. Due to the proven capability of unbound ionic cobalt (Co2+) to stimulate erythropoiesis in humans, both human and equine anti-doping regulations have listed cobalt as a banned substance, and in particular in horse drug testing, thresholds for cobalt concentrations applying to plasma and urine have been suggested or established. Recent reports about the finding of substantial amounts of undeclared nickel in arguably licit performance- and recovery-supporting products raised the question whether the ionic species of this transition metal (Ni2+), which exhibits similar prolyl hydroxylase inhibiting properties to Co2+, has been considered as a substitute for cobalt in doping regimens. METHODS: Therefore, a pilot study with 200 routine post-competition doping control horse urine samples collected from animals participating in equestrian, gallop, and trotting in Europe was conducted to provide a first dataset on equine urinary Ni2+ concentrations. All specimens were analyzed by conventional inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) to yield quantitative data for soluble nickel. RESULTS: Concentrations ranging from below the assay's limit of quantification (LOQ, 0.5 ng/mL) up to 33.4 ng/mL with a mean value (± standard deviation) of 6.1 (±5.1) ng/mL were determined for the total nickel content. CONCLUSIONS: In horses, nickel is considered a micronutrient and feed supplements containing nickel are available; hence, follow-up studies are deemed warranted to consolidate potential future threshold levels concerning urine and blood nickel concentrations in horses using larger sets of samples for both matrices and to provide in-depth insights by conducting elimination studies with soluble Ni2+-salt species.
- Subjects
NICKEL; DOPING in horse racing; EQUINE sports medicine; DRUGS of abuse; ANTI-doping policy in sports; URINALYSIS
- Publication
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry: RCM, 2016, Vol 30, Issue 7, p982
- ISSN
0951-4198
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/rcm.7528