Drugs in sport are big news and the use of performance-enhancing drugs
in sport is common. Here, Chris Cooper, a top biochemist at the
University of Essex, looks at the science behind drugs in sport. Using
the performance of top athletes, Cooper begins by outlining the limits
of human performance. Showing the basic problems of human
biochemistry, physiology, and anatomy, he looks at what stops us
running faster, throwing longer, or jumping higher. Using these
evidence-based arguments he shows what the body can, and cannot, do.
There is much curiosity about why certain substances are used, how
they are detected, and whether they truly have an effect on the body.
Cooper explains how these drugs work and the challenges of testing for
them, putting in to context whether the 'doping' methods of choice are
worth the risk or the effort. Exploring the moral, political, and
ethical issues involved in controlling drug use, Cooper addresses
questions such as 'What is cheating?', 'What compounds are legal and
why?', 'Why do the classification systems change all the time?', and
'Should all chemicals be legal, and what effect would this have on
sport?'. Looking forward, he examines the recent work to study the
physical limitations of rat and mice behaviour. He shows that,
remarkably, simple genetic experiments producing 'supermice' suggest
that there may be ways of improving human performance too, raising
ethical and moral questions for the future of sport. The paperback
includes a new introduction which considers the issues surrounding the
2012 Lance Armstrong doping scandal.
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The science behind drugs in sport
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191633768
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter