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Apropå TRT, så kunde man tydligen inte alls ta maxdos, utan:
"On top of this, your levels have to be below 700ng/dL even during treatment. For reference, the range considered "normal" by the national institute of health is 300ng/dL to 1000ng/dL. Even while you're receiving treatment your levels can't reach the high end of normal, let alone give you an abnormal boost. Basically as soon as a patient is injected with testosterone, their levels begin dropping back to their baseline level. This means even if a fighter gets the perfect dosage and gets to 700ng/dL, they will spend the next week, or longer (depending on the frequency of their dosing) with levels below that and dropping. " http://www.bloodyelbow.com/2014/3/3/...ABC-guidelines M.a.o. så handlade det inte om ngn 6:1 (som egentligen är lite fel sagt, då det inte mäter faktiskt testosteron) tryckning. Dessutom, apropå att det skulle varit en epidemi: "Q: Way more mixed martial artists are taking TRT than should be, though. Right? A: That's really, really hard to determine when the numbers involved are so small. The ESPN piece put the number at 15 mixed martial artists from 20,000. That's an incidence rate of 0.075%. That's not an alarmingly high number. Nick Lembo of New Jersey informs me that since January 2008, New Jersey has given 3 therapeutic use exemptions, one of which was subsequently revoked. The other two exemptions were originally granted in other jurisdictions and were honoured by New Jersey after additional testing and endocrinologist documentation. In that time period, it has had 4,930 mixed martial artists compete. That's a 0.04% - 0.06% incidence rate. Or a 0% incidence rate in terms of fighters getting their first ever exemption from New Jersey. Again, it's hardly an epidemic, and when you're dealing with numbers in the single and double digits, it's almost impossible to separate statistical significance from the noise. " |
Och apropå fördelar:
"Here's the thing. Are there guys trying to cheat by doing TRT? Probably, but in the jurisdiction of a competent commission, he's running a huge risk of getting caught. A much higher risk than if he just cycled steroids without ever trying to get a TUE. Handled properly, there's no advantage for a guy taking TRT. There just isn't. [UFC testade ju dessutom fighters på TRT själva varenda vecka, typ] That's borne out by their record in the ring. To use the fighters who competed in New Jersey as an example, two of the three fighters given a TRT TUE (Mir and Sonnen) lost their bouts. Marquardt won his against a replacement opponent (though his exemption was later revoked.) The winning percentage of guys taking TRT is not impressive. If it's a form of cheating, it's an exceptionally ineffective one. People talk about it being some sort of fountain of youth. The average guy in his mid-40's will have T levels of about 600ng/dL. If you're on TRT, your levels will be below that most of the time anyway. You're just not getting some huge advantage. You're not. " |
Från ufcs facebook: Junior Dos Santos makes his long awaited return to the Octagon taking on division prospect Stipe Miocic on May 24th in the co-main at UFC 173! Full Story: http://at.ufc.com/qTg5
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MMA Hour med Alexander Gustafsson, Mirko Cro-cop, Rashad Evans, Gilbert Melendez, Alexander Gustafsson, Kyle Kingsbury och John Gooden.
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Vitor dopar. :D |
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jag är fett lejm |
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Verkar förresten som att anledningen att Vitor inte ansökte om licens i Nevada var att han missade ett test av NSAC. Anledningen till att de inte får släppa resultaten av testet är för att han inte var licensierad där när testet togs. "Yahoo Sports: Did the test that Vitor took on Feb. 7 come back with an elevated T/E ratio? Tabachnick (Vitors advokat): The test is not relevant as Vitor is not applying for a license to fight in Nevada at this time. ... If Vitor passed the test, isn't the simple answer to that question "No?" Isn't saying the test is not relevant likely to read to most people as "yes, he failed the drug test?" The test results will come into play should Belfort ever apply for a license in Nevada again. They're on file, just not public record at this point. But, given that he has only fought in Nevada once since October of 2006, it's entirely possible that he'll never need to apply for a license in the state again. His camp knows if there was a failure and can turn down fights there. The UFC likely also knows and can avoid even asking if they so desire. The Belfort camp has no legal reason to, nor do they "have to." But self-releasing the results of the test are the only way that they'll erase the initial suspicions, which have only been amplified with the non-denial from Tabachnick." http://www.bloodyelbow.com/2014/3/3/...denial-of-drug |
eternallord: Varför är inte resultaten offentliga? Även om han inte ska tävla nu så kan man väl inte sopa sådant under mattan..?
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Om någon är mer insatt får de gärna rätta mig, men det är så jag förstått det åtminstone. Det här hittade jag i kommentarerna, angående andra kommissioner. Reserverar mig för källan: "The solution to disclosure is easy: Any commission with which he applies for a license can make a HIPPA disclosure for those results mandatory, just as they would medicals. I’m sure that any AC worth its salt would do so." |
Vet ni någon sida med snygga MMA-relaterade bakgrundsbilder?
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Visst är det lite godtyckligt var gränsen går, men så är det ju med en massa saker. |
Såg ni den galna fighten på förra eventet förresten?
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