Analysis of Non-Hormonal Nutritional Supplements for Anabolic-Androgenic Steroids - Results of an International Study

Analysis of Non-Hormonal Nutritional Supplements for Anabolic-Androgenic Steroids : Results of an International Study / Hans Geyer, Maria Kristina Parr, Ute Mareck, U. Reinhart, Y. Schrader, Wilhelm Schänzer. - (International journal of sports medicine 25 (2004) 2; p. 124-129).

  • PMID: 14986195.
  • DOI: 10.1055/s-2004-819955

Abstract

Several recent studies have shown evidence of some nutritional supplements containing prohibited anabolic androgenic steroids, so-called prohormones, which were not declared on the label. Therefore, a broad-based investigation of the international nutritional supplement market was initiated to clarify the extent of this problem. From October 2000 until November 2001, 634 non-hormonal nutritional supplements were purchased in 13 countries from 215 different suppliers. Most supplements were bought in shops in the respective countries (578 samples = 91.2 %) and on the internet (52 samples = 8.2 %). 289 supplements were from prohormone-selling companies and 345 supplements came from companies which do not offer prohormones. After isolation from the supplement matrix 11 different anabolic androgenic steroids, mainly prohormones of testosterone and nandrolone, were analysed by gas-chromatography/mass spectrometry. Out of the 634 samples analysed 94 (14.8 %) contained anabolic androgenic steroids not declared on the label (“positive supplements”). We could not obtain reliable data for 66 samples (10.4 %) due to matrix effects. In relation to the total number of products purchased per country, most of the positive supplements were bought in the Netherlands (25.8 %), in Austria (22.7 %), in the UK (18.8 %) and the USA (18.8 %). According to the label, all positive supplements were from companies located in only five countries: the USA, the Netherlands, the UK, Italy and Germany. 21.1 % of the nutritional supplements from prohormone-selling companies contained anabolic androgenic steroids, whereas 9.6 % of the supplements from companies not selling prohormones were positive. The positive supplements showed anabolic androgenic steroid concentrations of 0.01 µg/g up to 190 µg/g. The administration of supplements containing nandrolone prohormones adding up to a total uptake of more than 1 µg resulted in positive doping results for norandrosterone for several hours.

Original document

Parameters

Science
Research / Study
Date
1 February 2004
People
Geyer, Hans
Mareck, Ute
Parr, Maria Kristina
Reinhart, U.
Schänzer, Wilhelm
Schrader, Y.
Country
Germany
Language
English
Other organisations
Deutsche Sporthochschule Köln (DSHS) - German Sport University Cologne
Freie Universität Berlin (FU Berlin) - Free University of Berlin
Analytical aspects
Mass spectrometry analysis
Doping classes
S1. Anabolic Agents
Various
Contamination
Supplements
Document type
Pdf file
Date generated
2 July 2019
Date of last modification
7 September 2020
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