| Drug removed from banned
list is ergogenic
Pseudoephedrine, an over-the-counter remedy for nasal and
sinus congestion, was recently removed from the IOC’s list of
banned substances and placed on
the monitoring programme due to lack of
evidence of an ergogenic effect.
However, a team of UK researchers
has looked at the drug’s effects on
1,500m running performance and found that it
reduced finish times by nearly six seconds, or
2.1%.
Seven male athletes completed two 1,500m running trials on
an outdoor track under two conditions, one week apart. In one
trial they took pseudoephedrine capsules, in a dose of 2.5mg per
kg of body weight 90 minutes before they started the race; in the
second trial they were given a placebo
of identical-looking inactive capsules.
Blood samples were taken before and after the runs and
analysed for various measures, including lactose and glucose
concentrations and percent oxygen saturation.
The most important finding was that pseudoephedrine significantly
reduced time to completion, by 5.8 seconds. This contradicts the
findings of most previous studies into the effects of
pseudoephedrine but the researchers put
forward two possible explanations:
1. They used three times the normal therapeutic dose of the drug;
2. The drug was administered 90 minutes before exercise, when
it is most likely to have an ergogenic effect.
Because blood lactate and glucose concentrations and
oxygen saturation were not significantly
affected by pseudoephedrine ingestion, the
researchers exclude a purely metabolic mechanism
and suggest that the drug worked by increasing central nervous
system stimulation, so reducing perceived exertion.
The researchers concluded that
‘Scientific research is clearly needed
to investigate the
effects of ingestion of different doses of pseudoephedrine and different
exercise intensities and duration and possible mechanisms for its
ergogenic effect.’
Med Sci Sports Exerc 2006;
38(2):329-333 |