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  #1  
Old 12-02-2015, 01:00 PM
freddymo freddymo is offline
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Default Dueling Vet's on Lasix

Amazing how many opinions are bandied about on the % of horses that bleed, require Lasix and its PED value.

Here is Dr. Cohen's take OBVIOUSLY in the vocal minority:

http://www.thoroughbreddailynews.com...just-said-yes/

“The reason I put him on Lasix is that I had to in order to compete,” he said. “He won an allowance and a maiden race without it and at that lower level he would have been fine without it. But once we got to the graded stakes level we were at a huge disadvantage, maybe by 12-15 lengths, not being on it. Lasix is a stone cold performance-enhancer. It was horrible that I had to do this. It tortures me.”
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  #2  
Old 12-03-2015, 01:44 AM
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PED + a masking agent.
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  #3  
Old 12-03-2015, 06:18 AM
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Originally Posted by taxicab View Post
PED + a masking agent.
Despite reams of research over the last two decades that conclusively determined that Lasix has no properties as a 'masking agent', this lie gets repeated over and over. Feel free to identify it as a product that can enhance performance and be against it being administered on race day, but stop with the falsehood that it masks the presence of alleged nefarious administrations.
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  #4  
Old 12-03-2015, 08:55 AM
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Originally Posted by Kasept View Post
Despite reams of research over the last two decades that conclusively determined that Lasix has no properties as a 'masking agent', this lie gets repeated over and over. Feel free to identify it as a product that can enhance performance and be against it being administered on race day, but stop with the falsehood that it masks the presence of alleged nefarious administrations.
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  #5  
Old 12-03-2015, 09:33 AM
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GenuineRisk GenuineRisk is offline
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This is a ridiculous Op-Ed piece. From the article itself:

Quote:
"Nineteens months later, Effinex has became the last thing Cohen wanted him to be, the poster horse for anyone who still believes you can make do without Lasix. That’s not because it keeps horses from bleeding. It’s because it makes horses run faster."
You do understand, Bill, (may I call you Bill?) that these things are not mutually exclusive? I run faster when I'm not bleeding in my lungs, too.

And:

Quote:
"Cohen doesn’t want all the credit to go to the Lasix because he believes that takes away from Effinex’s ability. At least two other factors enter into the equation when it comes to why he improved so dramatically–a trainer change and the likelihood that he is simply a late-developing horse."
Soooo.... horse by a horse known for siring late-bloomers improves after being given to a A+ trainer, but come on, it has to be the Lasix!

And, this:

Quote:
"I don’t care what anyone else says, 99% of all horses run on Lasix and 99% of all horses do not bleed,” Cohen said. “Period. End of story. I have been scoping horses for 30 years and the percentage of horses that really bleed is less than 10%. Do not listen to any veterinarian tell you differently."
The key word here is, "really." I am assuming by the use of "really," that Cohen only counts it as bleeding if it's a 3 or 4 (the good doctor may mean something else, but in context, that's what I'm taking from it). No one disputes that bleeding from the nose is rare. Doesn't mean there isn't still minor bleeding going on and the damage from that is cumulative.

I like Finley's writing, but this is a piece for people who are already anti-Lasix. It's thoroughly unconvincing as an argument.

And the worst part:

Quote:
"It’s tough to stand by your principles when your principles could be costing you a lot of money. Lasix may not be good for horses, may not do much of anything when it comes to controlling breeding and might reduce the longevity of any horse that goes on it, but if you don’t run with it and everyone else does you are putting yourself at a serious competitive disadvantage. Cohen ultimately came to that realization, and that’s why he caved."
A paragraph like that makes it sound like that for Cohen, winning money trumps a horse's health and welfare. Nice work there dissing your subject, Finley. Not cool. (Dr. Cohen, if I were you, I'd totally block him on Facebook.)

Boo, Finley. Back to Argument 101.
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Old 12-03-2015, 09:37 AM
blackthroatedwind blackthroatedwind is offline
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Originally Posted by taxicab View Post
PED + a masking agent.
I can hardly wait for your second post.
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  #7  
Old 12-03-2015, 10:06 AM
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Originally Posted by taxicab View Post
PED + a masking agent.
Awesome first post cab!!
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Old 12-03-2015, 10:26 AM
Danzig Danzig is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kasept View Post
Despite reams of research over the last two decades that conclusively determined that Lasix has no properties as a 'masking agent', this lie gets repeated over and over. Feel free to identify it as a product that can enhance performance and be against it being administered on race day, but stop with the falsehood that it masks the presence of alleged nefarious administrations.


and then the study done that showed lasix does indeed help with what it's supposed to help with, EIPH.

but yeah, people have a right to their own opinion, but not their own facts! hard to have a legit discussion when falsehoods get promoted as truth.
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  #9  
Old 12-03-2015, 10:32 AM
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casp0555 casp0555 is offline
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  #10  
Old 12-03-2015, 03:40 PM
freddymo freddymo is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kasept View Post
Despite reams of research over the last two decades that conclusively determined that Lasix has no properties as a 'masking agent', this lie gets repeated over and over. Feel free to identify it as a product that can enhance performance and be against it being administered on race day, but stop with the falsehood that it masks the presence of alleged nefarious administrations.
Dr. Cohen called Lasix "a stone cold performance-enhancer". Masking? nobody believes that much anymore BUT horses simply run faster with Lasix, its pretty hard to deny years of figs
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  #11  
Old 12-03-2015, 03:44 PM
freddymo freddymo is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GenuineRisk View Post
This is a ridiculous Op-Ed piece. From the article itself:



You do understand, Bill, (may I call you Bill?) that these things are not mutually exclusive? I run faster when I'm not bleeding in my lungs, too.

And:



Soooo.... horse by a horse known for siring late-bloomers improves after being given to a A+ trainer, but come on, it has to be the Lasix!

And, this:



The key word here is, "really." I am assuming by the use of "really," that Cohen only counts it as bleeding if it's a 3 or 4 (the good doctor may mean something else, but in context, that's what I'm taking from it). No one disputes that bleeding from the nose is rare. Doesn't mean there isn't still minor bleeding going on and the damage from that is cumulative.

I like Finley's writing, but this is a piece for people who are already anti-Lasix. It's thoroughly unconvincing as an argument.

And the worst part:



A paragraph like that makes it sound like that for Cohen, winning money trumps a horse's health and welfare. Nice work there dissing your subject, Finley. Not cool. (Dr. Cohen, if I were you, I'd totally block him on Facebook.)

Boo, Finley. Back to Argument 101.
His opinion is hardily a scientific brief by Dr Cohen, its anecdotal at best. Horses do run faster when given Lasix. I am not necessarily against it in fact I lean way more towards keeping it in use. It is certainly over prescribed and it is over used because it does aid horses in running faster.
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  #12  
Old 12-03-2015, 07:18 PM
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GenuineRisk GenuineRisk is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by freddymo View Post
His opinion is hardily a scientific brief by Dr Cohen, its anecdotal at best. Horses do run faster when given Lasix. I am not necessarily against it in fact I lean way more towards keeping it in use. It is certainly over prescribed and it is over used because it does aid horses in running faster.
I don't think it's disputed that a horse can run faster when he's not bleeding in his lungs, and study after study has shown that the vast majority of race horses bleed in their lungs at some point in their careers. Is something that, at best, enables horses to run to the limit of their ability (as opposed to below it) a performance enhancer? I mean, it's not like it can make a slow horse fast.
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  #13  
Old 12-04-2015, 02:37 PM
freddymo freddymo is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GenuineRisk View Post
I don't think it's disputed that a horse can run faster when he's not bleeding in his lungs, and study after study has shown that the vast majority of race horses bleed in their lungs at some point in their careers. Is something that, at best, enables horses to run to the limit of their ability (as opposed to below it) a performance enhancer? I mean, it's not like it can make a slow horse fast.
Dr Cohen suggests the following:


I don’t care what anyone else says, 99% of all horses run on Lasix and 99% of all horses do not bleed,” Cohen said. “Period. End of story. I have been scoping horses for 30 years and the percentage of horses that really bleed is less than 10%. Do not listen to any veterinarian tell you differently.


Strange that there is such diversity in Vet's opinions on a fairly simple condition to substantiate?
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Old 12-04-2015, 03:13 PM
Rudeboyelvis Rudeboyelvis is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by freddymo View Post
Dr Cohen suggests the following:


I don’t care what anyone else says, 99% of all horses run on Lasix and 99% of all horses do not bleed,” Cohen said. “Period. End of story. I have been scoping horses for 30 years and the percentage of horses that really bleed is less than 10%. Do not listen to any veterinarian tell you differently.


Strange that there is such diversity in Vet's opinions on a fairly simple condition to substantiate?
His math is dubious at best. But besides that, if he has been scoping horses for 30 years....and 99% of the horses he is scoping are on Lasix, and thus 99% of horses don't bleed, what point exactly is he trying to make? That it works?

How could he possibly know that less than 10% of horses actually need it if 99% of his test samples are on it?
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  #15  
Old 12-04-2015, 11:28 PM
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GenuineRisk GenuineRisk is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by freddymo View Post
Dr Cohen suggests the following:


I don’t care what anyone else says, 99% of all horses run on Lasix and 99% of all horses do not bleed,” Cohen said. “Period. End of story. I have been scoping horses for 30 years and the percentage of horses that really bleed is less than 10%. Do not listen to any veterinarian tell you differently.


Strange that there is such diversity in Vet's opinions on a fairly simple condition to substantiate?
As I said earlier, he says, "That really bleed." Now, it's hard to tell exactly what is meant without hearing the tone, but in a lot of situations, "really" means "a lot." Like, "It's really hot out," or "he's really cute," or "that was a really bad op-ed Bill wrote there." If he means "really bleed" as in, bleed to where you can see it with the naked eye because it's coming out the horse's nose, then sure, I'll give him that only ten percent of the horses he's scoped "really bleed."

Rudeboyelvis also pointed out something I missed: that if the horses the vet is scoping are running/training on Lasix, then yes, it would stand to reason that most of them wouldn't bleed. Because that's what Lasix does, makes them not bleed.
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Old 12-05-2015, 05:13 AM
Rupert Pupkin Rupert Pupkin is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GenuineRisk View Post
I don't think it's disputed that a horse can run faster when he's not bleeding in his lungs, and study after study has shown that the vast majority of race horses bleed in their lungs at some point in their careers. Is something that, at best, enables horses to run to the limit of their ability (as opposed to below it) a performance enhancer? I mean, it's not like it can make a slow horse fast.
I think you are a little bit confused. If a horse bleeds a drop, that is not going to affect their performance. I've been with vets while they are scoping horses after races on numerous occasions. They will tell me whether the horse bled, and if so, to what extent, and whether or not it affected the horse's performance. In most cases, the horses don't bleed. In maybe 10-20% of the cases, the vet will say the horse barely bled, that there was a drop of blood in the horse's throat. In these cases when I asked whether or not this affected the horse's performance in any way, every vet has always said, "No." Occasionally there will be a case where they can see a decent amount of blood in the horse's throat and they will tell you that the horse did bleed enough to have affected his performance. That happens maybe 5-10% of the time at most.

Don't get me wrong. When your horse bleeds, it is never a good thing. Even if it is only a drop, there is always a chance the problem could get worse. You need to pay attention to it.

Anyway, my point is that if your contention is that the only reason that horses run faster with lasix is because it stops them from bleeding, you are totally wrong. Lasix does lessen the chances of a horse bleeding. You are correct that if you stop a horse from bleeding, he will run faster. That is true and that is one of the reasons that horses run faster with lasix. But that is not the main reason. If you take horses that have never bled and you put them on lasix, most of them will run faster. Practically any vet will tell you that.
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  #17  
Old 12-23-2015, 04:57 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kasept View Post
Despite reams of research over the last two decades that conclusively determined that Lasix has no properties as a 'masking agent', this lie gets repeated over and over. Feel free to identify it as a product that can enhance performance and be against it being administered on race day, but stop with the falsehood that it masks the presence of alleged nefarious administrations.
The World Anti-Doping Agency has it on the top of their banned drug list for one reason and one reason only.......it's ability to mask other drugs.
And that includes Equestrian events(Olympics etc...) where the horses are tested also.


http://www.marsing-sa.com/shop/furosemide/

http://list.wada-ama.org/list/s5-diu...asking-agents/

http://www.doping-prevention.de/subs...ng-agents.html

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2962812/
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  #18  
Old 12-23-2015, 11:27 PM
Danzig Danzig is offline
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Old 12-24-2015, 03:15 AM
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Lasix can't hide the presence of other meds in blood testing. Period.
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