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Russia Warns Swimmers to Stop Taking Banned Drug Ahead of Deadline

The All-Russian Swimming Federation has published a warning on its home page about a substance, androsta-3,5-diene-7,17-dione (Arimistan), that will be added to the WADA Proibited List in 2017.

The substance, which is considered legal by most of the world’s governments, is available over in over-the-counter supplements around the world. The substance is used to lower estrogen levels, which in theory can stimulate muscle growth.

As an isolated announcement, the announcement is ostensibly a fair effort by a federation to protect its athletes from a substance that is commonly available in many nutrition stores. Taken in context, however, the warning comes across as a stern effort to prevent a repeat of 2016, when meldonium was added the WADA banned substance list. Even after its ban, many Russian athletes continued to test positive.

Some, including World Champion swimmer Yulia Efimova, claimed that they stopped taking the substance before it was outlawed and claimed that they were victims of a drug that stayed in the body long after it was no longer being taken. Those athletes were given a pass on their positive tests (albeit not without much hand-wringing). Others, like tennis superstar  Maria Sharapova, claimed that they were unaware of the substance’s addition to the list, and were given suspensions for their ignorance.

The Russian Federation’s announcement seems poised to deter either excuse in 2017. Besides bringing increased publicity to the drug’s addition to “the List,” it warns that athletes should stop taking the substance in advance of its January 2017 outlaw.

From the release (translated from Russian):

It is necessary in advance to stop taking this substance, since January 1, 2017 in the Athlete’s Sample detection of this substance will constitute a violation of anti-doping rules.

While there has been no clear broad ruling by the Court of Arbitration for Sport about what it means for a substance to be added to the banned list (if an athlete is barred from taking that substance after its banishment date, or if an athlete is barred from testing positive after its banned date), but Russia’s Olympic result of just 2 bronze and 2 silver medals implies that the uncertainty of the year did not help Russia’s performance in Rio.

The announcement included a list of nutritional supplements that include the newly-banned substance:

  • Arom-X Sedds Chrome
  • Eradicate
  • Arimestage PCT 50
  • Arimiplex
  • Revolution PCT
  • Pure Labs Clomadex
  • Bio Armour Resurect PCT
  • Critical PCT
  • Logan Carter Elevate PCT and others.

 

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Aserra1
7 years ago

You have been warned Yulia! ????

thomas theodore
Reply to  Aserra1
7 years ago

Go Yulia!!!

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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