
By JAMES CHRISTIE
Thursday, January 23, 2003
– Page S5
Athletes swallowing performance-enhancing drugs are swallowing a
time bomb, Canada's chief antidoping official says.
Victor Lachance, head of the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport,
said he is not surprised that authorities in Italy and Britain are
studying the premature deaths of soccer players from Lou Gehrig's
disease, suspecting a connection to medications they were given by
their clubs or took themselves.
"It's not unreasonable to speculate or suspect that drug use is
linked to the deaths of [the soccer] athletes, given the wide range
of drugs used for doping substances and given that a combination of
them could create symptoms that mimic known diseases or actually
cause damage in the brain," Lachance said.
At least 40 cases of Lou Gehrig's disease -- a chronic,
progressive and fatal neurological disease medically known as
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or ALS -- have come under the
magnifying glass of Italy's top antidrug magistrate, Raffaele
Guariniello of Turin.
In a normal population of 24,000 -- the number of soccer players
in Italy's Serie A and Serie B from 1960-1997 -- doctors might
encounter a single case of the disease. Finding 40 cases among that
number of players is "terrifying," Guariniello told reporters.
The high incidence "appears to be work related," he said.
Guariniello suspects a link to the use of painkillers, particularly
corticosteroids, which enable players to take the field in spite of
injury.
In Britain, the governing Football Association has also begun to
investigate the deaths of several players with the disease,
including Don Revie, Rob Hindmarch and Willie Maddren. Former Celtic
winger Jimmy Johnstone is seriously ill with ALS, while former
London Irish rugby player Jarrod Cunningham was diagnosed with the
condition in the fall.
Italy's big-name fatality is Gianluca Signorini, the classy
defender for Parma, Genoa and Roma who died 12 weeks ago. When
Guariniello started interviewing dying players last March,
Signorini's wife, Antonella, refused to place any blame.
"Maybe it is only the fruit of destiny," she said. "We are
accusing no one. Gianluca has said to me so many times: no one ever
administered drugs to him against his will."
Guariniello staged a previous study into premature deaths among
professional cyclists. He found a higher-than-normal rate of cancers
of the liver and stomach, which could be linked to the use of
steroids. He also found such cancers among soccer players who died
young.
Lachance said the long-term consequences of drug use by athletes
will only be unveiled over time because such drug use is clandestine
and it would be unethical for doctors to generate their own clinical
information by giving subjects the quantities and combinations of
drugs some athletes reportedly use.
"We really are operating in the dark about when and how the
health consequences will show up," Lachance said. "We know they
will, because many of the doping substances have been studied for
medical usage and side effects can show up even with small doses. We
can predict far worse side effects in non-medical applications."
The high incidence of ALS among soccer players is the only hard
evidence investigators have to go on, so far. The connection between
Lou Gehrig's disease and drug use is more of a gut feeling.
The mystery is compounded by the fact investigators can't get
precise information on the medications athletes have taken, and
doctors do not know the exact cause of Lou Gehrig's disease.
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