RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT
Beware New steroid test uses oil exploration
technique
BD78/08
It’s a technique that has previously been used for oil exploration —
now researchers at The University of Nottingham have developed a new, highly
sensitive, anti-doping steroid test using hydropyrolysis.
The process — which uses high pressure environments to investigate the
chemical structure and make-up of a sample — has been refined and
developed at the University to develop highly accurate tests for detecting
levels of illicit steroids in urine. The test procedure is already in the
process of being commercialised and is expected to be ready for use in the
2012 Olympics.
Funding from the Research Council’s Ocean Margins LINK programme saw
researchers take the hydropyrolysis technique and apply it to geochemical
studies. This allowed the team to reconstruct the history of ocean basins to
help assess whether it was worth drilling for oil. By taking core samples
over geological time, the technique can detect the first ’charge’, or
presence, of oil.
But the same process can be used to detect the presence of illicit steroids
in the urine of athletes — and racehorses. High pressure hydrogen is
used to bombard the sample at pressures of 150 atmospheres and temperatures
of up to 500 degrees Celsius. This leaves sample molecules in a cleaner,
less degraded state than other extraction techniques, allowing more accurate
readings to be taken. Carbon isotopes are then measured, with the results
showing the ratios of carbon 12 and carbon 13 in the sample — whether
geochemical or biological.
John, Professor Morgan of Chemical Technology and Chemical Engineering at the
University, said: “Steroids are produced naturally in the body, but they
have a different carbon 13/carbon 12 ratios to those that have been
introduced illicitly. By refining the measurements of these two isotopes we
can produce a very accurate test for the presence of illegal steroids in
athletes.
“We are currently working with specialist individuals to develop the
technique for trial and have entered into partnership with Strata
Technology, a London-based company with expertise in high pressure
equipment, to commercialise the technique.”
The technique is also being used to refine current radio carbon dating
processes, which use the carbon 14 isotope to measure the age of an
archaeological sample.
“Most of these samples use charcoal,” Professor Morgan added. “But the stuff
you are trying to accurately date is often mixed in with much later debris
from the same site. Hydropyrolysis can remove this very rapidly and
efficiently. We are hoping that this will become the accepted model for
cleaning up radio carbon dating samples in the future — the
fundamental research for this is taking place at the moment.”
Professor Morgan is an expert on hydropyrolysis — he’s been working on
the technique, both in industry and academia, for the past 23 years. Over
the coming year he hopes to refine the testing process, exploring optimum
sample sizes and checking the sensitivity of the techniques.
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