Research article - (2014)13, 271 - 279 |
Acute Impact of Inhaled Short Acting B-Agonists on 5 Km Running Performance |
John Dickinson1,, Jiu Hu2, Neil Chester2, Mike Loosemore3, Greg Whyte2 |
Key words: Anti-Doping, WADA code, asthma, treatment, athlete care |
Key Points |
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Prior to the commencing the study ethical approval was obtained from Liverpool John Moores University Local Ethics Committee (ethics no: 09E18GW). Seven male runners (mean ± SD; age 22.4 ± 4.3 years; height 1.80 ± 0.07 m; body mass 76.6 ± 8.6 kg) volunteered and provided written and verbal informed consent. All participants were free from asthma, EIB and AHR confirmed by no previous history of disease and presenting with a negative Eucapnic Voluntary Hyperpnoea (EVH) challenge (Anderson et al., |
5 km time trial |
Participants were familiarised to running on a non-motorised treadmill (Woodway Curve, Woodway, USA) prior to initiating the 5 km time-trials. Familiarisation runs took place over a distance of 5 km on at least two occasions. Participants progressed to the recorded 5 km time-trials once they felt comfortable pacing themselves on the non-motorised treadmill over the 5 km distance. Each time-trial was conducted under controlled laboratory conditions: Temperate (18°C, relative humidity 40%), and Hot (30°C, relative humidity 40%). Prior to starting the time-trial participants were fitted with a heart rate monitor (Polar RS400; Polar Electro Oy, Kempele, Finland) and connected to a breath-by-breath gas analyser via a face mask (Oxycon Pro, Jagear, Wuerzberg, Germany). Over the course of the 5 km time-trial the following were measured: time, average heart rate (HR), oxygen consumption (VO2), carbon dioxide production (VCO2), minute ventilation (VE), respiratory exchange ratio (RER) and rating of perceived exertion (RPE). Two minutes following the completion of the 5 km time-trial capillary blood lactate was measured (Lactate Pro, Arkray KDK, Japan). During the 5 km time-trial participants were only given feedback on the distance they had covered. They were blinded to all other feedback such as time and HR. Participants were encouraged to complete the time-trial as fast as possible with prizes offered to the five fastest times. During the time-trial consistent positive encouragement was given to each participant. |
Maximal flow-volume loops |
Three maximal flow-volume loops were measured (MicroLab Spriometer ML3500, Cardinal Health, Chatham Maritime, UK) at baseline, 10 minutes after inhalation of PLA, SAL800 and SAL1600 and then 10 minutes post-5 km time-trial. On each occasion maximal flow volumes were measured according to the European Respiratory Society criteria (Miller et al., |
Urine collection |
Prior to the commencement of each trial subjects were asked to provide a urine sample in order to void themselves of urine, after which placebo or Salbutamol was administered as described above. Subjects were instructed to collect the first sample of urine passed following completion of the laboratory-based tests in line with in-competition anti-doping procedures as outlined in the World Anti-Doping Code International Standard for Testing 2012. Urine samples were provided by participants between 30 and 180 minutes following the completion of the 5 km time trails. Consumption of water during this period was encouraged |
Urinalysis |
All urinalysis was performed at HFL Sport Science (Fordham, UK) an independent drug surveillance laboratory and former WADA-accredited laboratory. Sample preparation involved the addition of 200 ng of Salbutamol-D3 (NMI) as an internal standard to 1 ml of urine. Following the addition of 2 ml of 0.1M phosphate buffer pH 6.8 and 100 µl of E. Coli enzyme (β-glucuronidase) solution the mixture was incubated overnight at 37°C. Strata XC 60 mg solid phase extraction cartridges (Phenomenex, Macclesfield, UK) were conditioned with 3 ml of methanol followed by 3 ml of reagent grade water. Following centrifugation at 3500 rpm for 5 min the samples were applied to the cartridges. The cartridges were then washed with 3 ml of 0.1M acetate buffer pH 9.0 followed by 3 ml of reagent grade water, 3 ml of 0.1M HCl, 3 ml of methanol and 3 ml of diethyl ether. The cartridges were then dried for 5 min under vacuum and samples were eluted into glass vials with two, 1 ml of basic drug elution solvent (160 ml ethyl acetate, 34 ml propan-2-ol and 6 ml 34% ammonia solution). Samples were then evaporated to dryness at ambient temperature using a centrifugal vacuum concentrator (Genevac Ltd, Ipswich, UK) and reconstituted in 10 µl of isopropanol followed by 200 µl of basic reconstitution solution (495 ml of 0.1 acetic acid mixed with 5 ml Benzyldimethylphenyl Ammonium). Samples were centrifuged at 3000 rpm for 10 min prior to LCMS submission. Samples were injected onto a Thermo Scientific Accela HPLC system coupled to a Thermo Scientific LTQ Orbitrap Discovery Mass Spectrometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, USA). Chromatographic separation was performed on a Waters Atlantis T3 column (2.1 x 100 mm, particle size 3 um; Waters Ltd, Elstree, UK) at 35°C. The mobile phase was a gradient system of 0.1% acetic acid aqueous solution containing uracil (300 ng·ml-1) and 0.1% acetic acid in acetonitrile containing uracil (300 ng.ml-1) set at a flow rate of 0.4 ml·min-1. The urine salbutamol concentrations reported correspond to the sum of the free and glucuronide conjugates. The samples were analysed over the calibration range of 10 to 2000 ng·ml-1. The lower limit of quantification was accepted as the lowest standard on the calibration curve (10 ng·ml-1) |
Statistical analysis |
Total time to complete the 5 km time-trial under each of the conditions was analysed by a repeated measures ANOVA. Similar analyses were undertaken for HR, VO2, VCO2, VE, RER, RPE, blood lactate, FEV1, FVC, PEF and FEF25-75. A p-value of ≤0.05 was deemed significant for all analysis. |
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Throughout all trials participants reported no side effects from inhalation of up to 1600 µg inhaled salbutamol. |
Performance trial (hot: 18°C, 40% RH) |
All seven participants completed all three 5 km time-trials. No significant difference was noted for overall completion time between trials (see |
Performance trial (hot: 30°C, 40% RH) |
All seven participants completed all three 5 km time-trials. No significant difference was noted for overall completion time between trials (see |
Urine analysis |
Following inhalation of 800 µg of Salbutamol and a 5 km time-trial under temperate (18°C) and hot (30°C) ambient conditions mean ± SD urine concentrations were 122.96 ± 69.22 ng·ml-1 and 138.83 ± 98.11 ng·ml-1, respectively (see |
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This is the first study to examine the impact of inhaled salbutamol at a dose of 1600 µg The main action of inhaled salbutamol is to act as a bronchodilator to reverse the bronchoconstriction of airway smooth muscle. This results in the asthmatic airway becoming dilated resulting in reduced airway resistance, leading to improvements in VE and exercise performance (Haverkamp et al., Further study is required in a larger cohort to ensure an avoidance of Type II error. A power calculation would suggest that to detect a change in 1% in sprint performance a sample size of 48 participants would be required. Furthermore our participants were not elite endurance athletes. Elite athletes could not be included in this study as they would have been at risk of a doping violation. Therefore we cannot claim our results directly represent the effects of inhaled salbutamol in elite endurance athletes. The current urinary threshold imposed by WADA is intended to enable differentiation between the use of oral and inhaled Salbutamol and also approved therapeutic use and misuse. Oral use is associated with performance enhancement since it typically represents doses in the region of 10-fold greater than those following inhalation. Nevertheless, there has been limited research to examine this association. From an endurance exercise perspective only Collomp et al. ( There exists some ambiguity in terms of the therapeutic use of inhaled Salbutamol. Whilst the recommended maximal dosing regimen for Salbutamol is 100 µg to 400 µg up to four times daily, it is typically prescribed The current study demonstrates the possibility of a urinary Salbutamol concentration above the current threshold following therapeutic use. However, whilst the WADA Prohibited List threshold is 1000 ng.ml-1 (WADA, A limitation to our study is the variability in actual dose inhaled. Whilst the use of a chamber aimed to reduce this limitation it remains possible that some participants with low urine concentration inhaled lower doses of Salbutamol. In addition future work should investigate whether there is a relationship between body weight and the urinary concentration of salbutamol. A lighter athlete may be at a greater risk of breaching the threshold when administering high doses compared to a heavier athlete. Such findings would have implications to the care athletes receive in the future. |
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This study has demonstrated that there is no improvement in performance following the inhalation of up to 1600 µg of Salbutamol in non-asthmatic athletes in temperate or hot environments. This would suggest that the current WADA guidelines, which allows athletes to inhale up to 1600 µg is sufficient to avoid pharmaceutical induced enhancement in 5 km running performance. However, such high doses not only suggest poor management of asthma but also increase the risk of an athlete contravening the current urinary threshold. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
This projected was funded by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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REFERENCES |
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