Publications by authors named "M C Mazzarino"

Dried urine spots have recently been proposed as an alternative matrix in the anti-doping field. Drying urine may open the opportunity to limit microbial and thermal degradation of the prohibited substances during transportation to the anti-doping laboratories without the need for refrigeration or freezing. In this study, a multi-targeted initial testing procedure was developed for the determination of 237 prohibited drugs/metabolites from 11 different classes in dried urine spots.

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Purpose: The metabolic pathways of APP-CHMINACA were characterized to select the markers of intake for implementation into analytical assays used by the clinical and forensic communities. We have combined the evidences obtained by both in vitro experiments and administration studies on mice.

Methods: APP-CHMINACA was incubated with either human or mouse liver microsomes.

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Background: Dried blood spots have recently been approved by the World Anti-Doping Agency as an alternative biological matrix for testing of doping substances. However, their use is limited to the detection of non-threshold compounds without a Minimum Reporting Level due to the numerous issues related to quantitative analyses and the limitation on testing capabilities of a haemolysed matrix.

Aim: In this study androstenedione, testosterone and IGF-1 were longitudinally monitored in four different blood matrices to evaluate the potential of liquid capillary blood as an alternative matrix for quantitative determination in doping control analysis.

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Article Synopsis
  • A novel urine sampling method was developed to more accurately measure drug use in ultramarathon runners compared to traditional questionnaires.
  • Out of 412 urine samples tested, nearly half showed the presence of drugs, with 16.3% containing prohibited substances, particularly NSAIDs and painkillers.
  • The study revealed that self-reported drug use via questionnaires was lower than actual findings from urine samples, indicating the effectiveness of blind urine testing in detecting undisclosed drug use among athletes.
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Bacterial infections and the concurrent inflammation have been associated with increased long-term cardiovascular (CV) risk. In patients receiving peritoneal dialysis (PD), bacterial peritonitis is a common occurrence, and each episode further increases late CV mortality risk. However, the underlying mechanism(s) remains to be elucidated before safe and efficient anti-inflammatory interventions can be developed.

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