ANAD Comisia de Audiere 2010_31 ANAD vs Domokos Balogh

Related case:
ANAD Comisia de Apel 2012_01 Domokos Balogh vs ANAD
November 18, 2010

In June 2010 the Agenţia Naţională Anti-Doping (ANAD), the National Anti-Doping Agency of Romania, has reported an anti-doping rule violation against the Athlete Domokos Balogh after his sample tested positive for the prohibited substance testosterone with a T/E ratio above the WADA threshold.
After notification a provisional suspension was ordered.
Research of the Athlete’s supplements showed that the food supplement Animal Test contained the prohibited substance testosterone.
On 16 September 2010 the ANAD Hearing Commission decides to impose a 2 year period of ineligibility on the Athlete, starting on the date of the provisional suspension, i.e. 12 August 2010.

Original document

Parameters

Legal Source
National Decisions
Date
16 September 2010
Arbitrator
Vȃjialӑ, Graziela Elena
Original Source
National Anti-Doping Agency of Romania (ANAD)
Country
Romania
Language
English
ADRV
Adverse Analytical Finding / presence
Sport/IFs
Bodybuilding & Fitness (IFBB) - International Federation of Bodybuilding & Fitness
Other organisations
Agenţia Naţională Anti-Doping (ANAD) - National Anti-Doping Agency Romania
Laboratories
Bucharest, Romania: Romanian Doping Control Laboratory (ROM)
Cologne, Germany: Institute of Biochemistry - German Sport University Cologne
Analytical aspects
Mass spectrometry analysis
Doping classes
S1. Anabolic Agents
Substances
T/E ratio (testosterone / epitestosterone)
Testosterone
Various
Contamination
Supplements
Document type
Pdf file
Date generated
28 May 2014
Date of last modification
16 September 2014
Category
  • Legal Source
  • Education
  • Science
  • Statistics
  • History
Country & language
  • Country
  • Language
Other filters
  • ADRV
  • Legal Terms
  • Sport/IFs
  • Other organisations
  • Laboratories
  • Analytical aspects
  • Doping classes
  • Substances
  • Medical terms
  • Various
  • Version
  • Document category
  • Document type
Publication period
Origin