Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Anti-Doping Expert Says Discovery Of 31 New Cases 'Not Surprising'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 May, 2016 11:59 AM
    MONTREAL — A Montreal-area doping-control expert says it is not surprising that 31 new doping cases have been discovered in retested samples taken from athletes during the 2008 Summer Olympics.
     
    Christiane Ayotte, who works at the Armand-Frappier Research Institute, said testing technology is 1,000 times more sensitive compared with eight years ago when the samples were first analyzed.
     
    "We have benefited from the new technology since the (2010) Vancouver Olympics, but it was not available in Beijing (in 2008)," she said in an interview. "So it's not surprising that new cases have been discovered. It's sad, but not surprising.
     
    "Tests eight years later can now more accurately detect certain substances. I suspect anabolic steroids as our detection methods on that score have vastly improved."
     
    The 31 athletes in six sports could be barred from competing at this summer's Olympics in Brazil, while other positive cases could emerge from the 2012 London Games.
     
    The 31, who come from 12 countries, have not yet been identified by the International Olympic Committee but Ayotte has her suspicions.
     
    "We can presume it's the usual suspects who are involved," she said.
     
    Ayotte added the IOC "has its hands full" right now, due to recent claims by the ex-head of Russia's anti-doping laboratory, Grigory Rodchenkov, who admitted to drugging athletes during the 2014 Games in Sochi.
     
    Rodchenkov told the New York Times he gave Russian athletes a cocktail of drugs before the 2014 Sochi Games and switched tainted urine samples with clean ones.
     
    "There have been demands from athletes — from all over, in fact — for the IOC to do something serious to show its firm commitment to work for a doping-free sports environment," Ayotte said. "(The IOC) doesn't have the choice with what it has just discovered."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Facebook Photo Tribute To Saskatchewan Accident Victims Draws Worldwide Response

    Facebook Photo Tribute To Saskatchewan Accident Victims Draws Worldwide Response
    SASKATOON — A Saskatchewan woman who invited people to send photographs of sunsets to pay tribute to a family of four who died in a car crash this year is staggered by the response.

    Facebook Photo Tribute To Saskatchewan Accident Victims Draws Worldwide Response

    Calgary Man Admits In Agreed Statement Of Facts To Stabbing Five Young People

    Calgary Man Admits In Agreed Statement Of Facts To Stabbing Five Young People
      But Matthew de Grood's lawyer has pleaded not guilty on his client's behalf to five counts of first-degree murder.

    Calgary Man Admits In Agreed Statement Of Facts To Stabbing Five Young People

    Man Reported With Weapon On Newfoundland Campus May Have Had Fishing Rod

    Man Reported With Weapon On Newfoundland Campus May Have Had Fishing Rod
    Const. Geoff Higdon says the call came in just after 8 a.m. local time and police responded to an area called Kent's Pond.

    Man Reported With Weapon On Newfoundland Campus May Have Had Fishing Rod

    Nova Scotia Reports First Confirmed Case Of Zika In Woman Who Has Recovered

    Nova Scotia Reports First Confirmed Case Of Zika In Woman Who Has Recovered
      Frank Atherton, deputy chief medical officer of health, said Monday the woman infected with the virus is in her 30s and the illness was detected after she fell ill upon her return to Nova Scotia from a trip

    Nova Scotia Reports First Confirmed Case Of Zika In Woman Who Has Recovered

    Lyme Disease Cases Rising In Canada, Climate Change Cited As A Probable Factor

    Lyme Disease Cases Rising In Canada, Climate Change Cited As A Probable Factor
    Federal Health Minister Jane Philpott says climate change is believed to be one of the major factors driving the increase in cases of Lyme disease across the country in recent years.

    Lyme Disease Cases Rising In Canada, Climate Change Cited As A Probable Factor

    Const. James Forcillo case postponed to Wednesday as lawyers prepare arguments

    Const. James Forcillo case postponed to Wednesday as lawyers prepare arguments
    Lawyers for Const. James Forcillo requested extra time Monday to complete their preparations on the case.

    Const. James Forcillo case postponed to Wednesday as lawyers prepare arguments