Bolt: Takze kdyz se to vezme, tak Actovegin byl zakazan v roce 2000 ale jen na 2 mesice, a co za tim stoji vi asi jen kdo za to loboval...
In December, 2000, the IOC banned the use of Actovegin as an ergogenic substance after noting its prolific use at the Sydney Olympic Games and that year’s Tour de France [8]. The ban was lifted however, 2 months later after no indisputable evidence was provided demonstrating Actovegin had performance enhancing potential. The current stance from World Anti Doping Agency (WADA) is that Actovegin is legal under 50 mL every 6 h. However, 50 mL is 25 fold higher than the amount injected for a muscle tear and that is without concentrating the drug; making these guidelines somewhat ill-informed. Further, neither intravenous nor intramuscular injections of Actovegin are prohibited in or out of competition according to latest search in Global Drug Reference Online, which is approved by UK Anti-Doping (UKAD), the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport (CCES), the United States Anti- Doping Agency (USADA) and WADA [9,10].