Why does USADA collect a minimum of 90mL of urine during sample collection?
USADA must collect a minimum of 90mL during a urine test to ensure that all drug tests can be performed.
USADA must collect a minimum of 90mL during a urine test to ensure that all drug tests can be performed.
Opium is the milky substance that is extracted from the seed pod of the opium poppy once all of the petals have fallen of.
“Emerging Technologies” was the topic for the 9th Annual Symposium on Anti-Doping Science, hosted by the U. S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) October 2-4 in Lansdowne, VA.
“Detection of Enhancement of 02 Transport: Seven Years of Progress” was the topic for the 8th Annual USADA Symposium on Anti-Doping Science, hosted by the U. S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) October 2-5 in Vancouver, B.C.
“Oxygen Transport and Energy Production” is the topic for the 6th Annual USADA Symposium on Anti-Doping Science, which will be hosted by the United States Anti-Doping Agency October 26-28 in Dallas, Texas.
The Sports Medicine Research and Testing Laboratory (SMRTL), located at the University of Utah, has joined an elite group of laboratories worldwide accredited to test Olympic, Paralympic, and other amateur and professional athletes for performance-enhancing and other prohibited drugs.
The United States Anti-Doping Agency has selected “Intra-Individual Reference Ranges” as the topic for the 5th Annual USADA Symposium on Anti-Doping Science, which will take place September 29-30 in Lausanne, Switzerland.
The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency’s three-day Fourth Annual USADA Symposium on Anti-Doping Science entitled “Muscle Development and Recovery: Implications for Doping Control” concluded Monday, Sept.12, following an extensive examination of the most recent discoveries about control of muscle growth and recovery and the potential for abuse by athletes.
The United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) awarded two grants in the fourth quarter 2003 in the fight against doping.