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Thursday, 2 October, 2025
HomeHarm ReductionAnti-doping agency bans non-diagnostic carbon monoxide in sport

Anti-doping agency bans non-diagnostic carbon monoxide in sport

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) will add the non-diagnostic use of carbon monoxide to its prohibited methods list from next year, reports Reuters.

The gas is used in low doses to help measure critical blood metrics in athletes, especially haemoglobin levels, but there have been suggestions that repeated inhalation can be used to improve athletic performance.

The International Cycling Union (UCI) has banned its use outside a medical facility, and in its announcement, WADA said its use could increase erythropoiesis – the process of creating new red blood cells.

“However, using it for diagnostic purposes, such as total haemoglobin mass measurements or the determination of pulmonary diffusion capacity, is not prohibited,” WADA added.

“The current wording was chosen to differentiate between illicit use and the intake resulting from natural combustion processes (e.g, smoking), the environment (exhaust gases) or diagnostic procedures.”

An investigation published by website Escape Collective during this year’s Tour de France alleged several teams used carbon monoxide rebreather devices to optimise altitude training.

 

Reuters article – WADA to ban non-diagnostic use of carbon monoxide in sport (Open access)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

Evidence grows of air pollution link to neurodegenerative disease

 

World anti-doping body suspends Africa’s only testing lab

 

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