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Started by TGJB, June 20, 2013, 11:09:41 AM

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TGJB

A couple of weeks ago I talked to Ryan Goldberg for over an hour for the last article in the TDN series about drugs in racing. I thought I was a source.

TDN just called to get a photo to run with \"the interview\".

Batten the hatches.
TGJB

Rich Curtis

\"TDN just called to get a photo to run with \"the interview\".
Batten the hatches.\"

  Why? They can\'t make you send a photo.

Fairmount1

I\'d prefer if you would have said \"Open the floodgates\" [for the truth that\'s about to flow out]

TGJB

I\'ve now read a draft. It\'s a great article, they use a few quotes from me and many from others. Will be out in a few days.
TGJB


kekomi

thanks for linking to this--does anyone know where one can get a copy of the NTRA report on the medications taken prior to this year\'s belmont?

does anyone know if lasix was included as a medication that orb didn\'t receive 72 hours prior to the belmont, or was lasix not considered a medication for these purposes? i thought that the fourth place horse, the Kiaran McLaughlin horse, was supposed to be running lasix free, was he given some other meds, but not lasix?

TGJB--if you have time, could you post a quick comparison of the testing and meds restrictions in all three of this year\'s triple crown races? i know you mentioned them before each race but it would be nice to be able to see them side-by-side.

catcapper

Glad you asked. Below is a link posted earlier here by Salute The General in the Incognito, Slow Fractions thread. This is a list of the pre-race meds each horse received  48hrs out from the Belmont.

It lists Incognito as having received Thelin, a drug originally created to treat pulmonary hypertension in the lungs. It was withdrawn from the market due to liver toxicity -BUT, apparently the attending vet mispelled it. Apparently Incognito received Theelin. The stock answer for the use of Theelin is to treat stifles, but below are two links that show Theelin is also used as an adjunct bleeder medication.

[www.gaming.ny.gov]

It lists Incognito as having received Thelin, a drug originally created to treat pulmonary hypertension in the lungs. It was withdrawn from the market due to liver toxicity -BUT, apparently the attending vet mispelled it. Apparently Incognito received Theelin. The stock answer for the use of Theelin is to treat stifles, but below are two links that show Theelin is also used as an adjunct bleeder medication. It took me 15 minutes on the Internet to learn this.


http://www.paulickreport.com/f... 
I quote, \"There are a number of adjunct medications that have been utilized in conjunction with furosemide in an attempt to further reduce EIPH. These adjuncts include medications such as conjugated estrogens, aminocaproic acid, tranexamic acid and carbazochrome. While numerous trainers and veterinarians believe they have seen a clinical effect with some of these adjuncts, none of these medications has yet been scientifically proven to be efficacious at decreasing EIPH. This fact does not mean these medications do not work."

http://www.thehorse.com/articl...
I quote, \"Mary Scollay, DVM, KHRC equine medical director, said the advisory board voted to recommend prohibition of adjunct bleeder medications, which can be administered to horses in addition to the common anti-bleeder medication Salix, as a matter of uniformity and because there is no scientific evidence \"support the efficacy of adjunct bleeder medications.\" Adjunct bleeder medications include substances such as Tranex, Amicar, Premarin, Estrone, and Theelin.\"
Theelin is an adjunct bleeder medication. As to exactly why it was administered to Incognito, I don't know.

catcapper

To be fair,

Incognito was also administered Adequan, Legend, and Bute as well. All used for varying degrees of arthritis (or pre arthrithic conditions), and inflammation in joints. Adequan and Legend are given in a series of shots. Same with Theelin if it is used to tighten stifles. Vet records could confirm this. So perhaps, Theelin was indeed administered for the joint issues.  But it does beg the question of it\'s anti-bleeder application.

TGJB

Kekomi-- I think the best source for the TC medication rules is the TDN, that\'s where I was getting what info I had.
TGJB

kekomi

thanks!

so i guess lasix isn\'t considered a pre-race medication, since it wasn\'t listed on any of the forms.

they give colts premarin? premarin is an estrogen replacement therapy for menopausal women derived from the urine of preganant mares...

theelin (name derived from the greek word for woman) is a form of estrogen secreted by the ovaries of female mammals, trade names estronal and estrone, used for hormone replacement therapy in women whose estrogen levels are too low.

why would you give estrogen for tight stifles to race horse right before he\'s going place incredible mechanical loads on his stifles? estrogen weakens ligaments...ligaments hold joints together...the stifle is the most complex joint a horse has and is analogous to our knee joint. it\'ll loosen his ligaments for sure, and probably radically shorten his career, and set him up for a catastrophic breakdown.

tranex is short for tranexamic acid, which is sold under the brand name lysteda, which is used to treat heavy menstral flows and to slow blood loss in hemophiliacs--it\'s a coagulant. it causes the blood to clot.

amicar is also  coagulant (i.e. blood thickener)--not really sure how making the blood more viscous would aid in EIPH...seems like it would be more likely to exacerbate the problem (since despite the name, bleeding in horses isn\'t a clotting problem, but a bursting blood vessel problem)...these would be nasty combinations with EPO...might cause a horse to drop dead of heart failure for no apparent reason...

i thought the insanity with doping in cycling was bad, but the insanity in horses racing is just plain quackery.


BH

Thelin has been used for many years for its affect on the stay and reciprocal apparatus of the hind limbs. If you\'ve ever seen a mare that is very close to foaling you\'ll notice they become very sloppy behind due to the relaxing of muscles, etc. and that will give you some idea of thelin\'s affect.

This affect makes some horses much more comfortable, esp. if their stifles are sticking(Google it).

Alysheba routinely ran on thelin.

catcapper

Please, let\'s gets this straight...you just said Thelin, is it not Theelin that you mean? This is how the Thelin/Theelin thing started - with an apparent misspelling.

razzle

Excellent article-series of articles, so glad this issue is getting airtime.  Love Dr.Scollay, I regard her as a great hope for the sport.  I am also very impressed with how credible the sources are in the article. I liked the reference to the \"glacial\" speed at which we seem to be grasping at icicles among the 38 racing jurisdictions.  It would be so difficult to know who to target as a decision maker, only to find they will have melted before you get to them and only a drip remains.  
Hats off to JB for his role in this, it\'s not always in his self-interest to do it.

TGJB

I\'ve had a lot of dialogue with Kevin Cummins, Udall\'s legislative assistant, who is a horseplayer himself and knows the players and the game pretty well. He is skeptical (to say the least) about the industry making major changes on its own. But there\'s an interesting, complicated dynamic right now-- this is the most awareness the issue has ever had. We\'ll see.
TGJB