Nutritional supplements cross-contaminated and faked with doping substances

Nutritional supplements cross-contaminated and faked with doping substances / Hans Geyer, Maria Kristina Parr, Karsten Koehler, Ute Mareck, Wilhelm Schänzer and Mario Thevis. – In: Journal of mass spectrometry, 7 (2008), vol. 43 (July), p. 892–902


Since 1999 several groups have analyzed nutritional supplements with mass spectrometric methods (GC/MS, LC/MS/MS) for contaminations and adulterations with doping substances. These investigations showed that nutritional supplements contained prohibited stimulants as ephedrines, caffeine, methylenedioxymetamphetamie and sibutramine, which were not declared on the labels. An international study performed in 2001 and 2002 on 634 nutritional supplements that were purchased in 13 different countries showed that about 15% of the nonhormonal nutritional supplements were contaminated with anabolic-androgenic steroids (mainly prohormones). Since 2002, also products intentionally faked with high amounts of ‘classic’ anabolic steroids such as metandienone, stanozolol, boldenone, dehydrochloromethyl-testosterone, oxandrolone etc. have been detected on the nutritional supplement market. These anabolic steroids were not declared on the labels either. The sources of these anabolic steroids are probably Chinese pharmaceutical companies, which sell bulk material of anabolic steroids. In 2005 vitamin C, multivitamin and magnesium tablets were confiscated, which contained crosscontaminations of stanozolol and metandienone. Since 2002 new ‘designer’ steroids such as prostanozol, methasterone, androstatrienedione etc. have been offered on the nutritional supplement market. In the near future also cross-contaminations with these steroids are expected. Recently a nutritional supplement for weight loss was found to contain the b2-agonist clenbuterol. The application of such nutritional supplements is connected with a high risk of inadvertent doping cases and a health risk. For the detection of new ‘designer’ steroids in nutritional supplements, mass spectrometric strategies (GC/MS, LC/MS/MS) are presented.

Original document

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Science
Review
Date
1 July 2008
People
Geyer, Hans
Koehler, Karsten
Mareck, Ute
Parr, Maria Kristina
Schänzer, Wilhelm
Thevis, Mario
Country
Germany
Language
English
Analytical aspects
Mass spectrometry analysis
Substances
Androsta-1,4,6-triene-3,17-dione (androstatrienedione)
Boldenone
Caffeine
Clenbuterol
Ephedrine
Metandienone (17β-hydroxy-17α-methylandrosta-1,4-dien-3-one)
Nandrolone (19-nortestosterone)
Oxandrolone
Sibutramine
Stanozolol
Testosterone
Various
Contamination
Supplements
Document category
Scientific article
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Pdf file
Date generated
20 October 2014
Date of last modification
7 September 2020
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  • Education
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  • Various
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