Vintage Doping

Johnsqual

Senior Retro Guru
Hey,

Apologies if this raises a taboo subject, but I was reading
an old book about Belgian cycling, and it had a rather long chapter
about doping. At one point, it briefly mentioned Belgians being known
for using nitroglycerine (!) to enhance performance.

Not that I'm thinking of trying it, but what would be the reason for doing
this? Does it open blood vessels or something? Maybe something about being an explosive sprinter... :oops: Sorry.

Anyone with any medical knowledge who can explain this?

Cheers,

Johnny
 
My knowledge of this is very little: When I started racing in 1951 I was advised by a steel erector to try a proprietory tonic, and discovered it contain a very small amount of strychnine.
In the 1950's it was fairly well accepted that the Belgian soigneurs would expect their riders to take whatever they were given, and certainly riders routinely had vitamin injections.
The only direct experience I saw was in 1969 at a ladies stage race in france where a leading Belgian rider, who shaved her face every morning, was openly given a injection just before the start in each calf. Probably a glucose injection.
 
Johnsqual":3ftgprqg said:
Not that I'm thinking of trying it, but what would be the reason for doing
this? Does it open blood vessels or something?

Spot on; technical term is a vasodilator. It's not the nitroglycerine itself that does the job, more that it yields the vasodilator nitric oxide.

Even to this day, low-dose nitroglycerine can be had on prescription for certain heart conditions, irrespective of its reputation as an unstable high explosive.

David
 
Doping

After World War 1 riders were using morphine. and since then you name it its been used.
In world war 2 the allied troops, especially the Americans went through thousands of tons of amphetamines. which were then used by cyclists.
 
Hey,

I recently met the boyfriend of a colleague who was the assistant to the doctor of the
Belgian army cycling team sometime in the 70's, during his army service.

He said the same thing as David B about nitroglycerine - maybe the army had access to more supplies of it than most people.

He said the main part of his job as assistant was to keep the cyclists away from the medical supplies because they'd steal anything they could get their hands on, and to watch out for made up ailments used as an excuse for getting hold of drugs.

Oh yeah, there were also tales of people sewing hypodermics into their shorts to administer themselves in secret during races.

Thanks for the Major Taylor link. I'd heard of him but not read the story before.

Cheers,

John
 
Johnsqual":lrqcello said:
He said the same thing as David B about nitroglycerine - maybe the army had access to more supplies of it than most people.

There is also a military link to its adoption for medical use; it was discovered as the cause of an abnormally high incidence of low blood pressure cases amongst munitions workers (round about WW1 I think).

As for cycling and nitroglycerine, beware any untoward consequences. To quote Michael Caine: "You're only supposed to blow the bloody Dawes off". I'll get me coat. :oops:

David
 
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