Svetlana Terenteva has banned for IOC 2010

Svetlana Terenteva has banned for IOC 2010:Every game has its own rules and regulations. And every game and sport is different from other game. IOC is a sport and has announced its new policies and rules.

Svetlana Terenteva is a member of the Women’s ice hockey team from the Russian Federation. She was born in 25th September 1983. She is going the best athletic in winter Olympic ice hockey. But now she she was in danger and has some trouble.

Russian ice hockey player Svetlana Terenteva became the first athlete to test positive at the Vancouver Olympics but escaped a ban as she took the substance before the Olympic period, the International Olympic Committee said on Thursday. Terenteva used a light stimulant contained in an over-the-counter nose spray that is not banned in out-of-competition tests but was still in her body when tested in Vancouver ahead of the February 12-28 Games, IOC Vice President Thomas Bach said. “This is the first doping case for Vancouver.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) on Thursday issued a reprimand against Svetlana Terenteva, a member of the Women’s ice hockey team from the Russian Federation for an anti-doping rule violation.

Last Saturday Terenteva tested under pre-competition doping control measures put for by the IOC. The IOC found the prohibited substance “tuaminoheptane”. The IOC says that Tuaminoheptane is a prohibited substance ‘in competition’ but not ‘out of competition’.

The IOC set up a Disciplinary Commission in which Terenteva admitted that she had used Rhinofluimucil under prescription to cure a bad head cold in January, but that she had stopped using it on Feb. 3 2010, as she knew the substance would be prohibited during the period of the Olympic Games, starting on Feb. 4.

The Disciplinary Commission unanimously concluded that the athlete had committed an anti-doping rule violation in that there was the presence of the prohibited substance, tuaminoheptane, in her body, regardless of the date she had taken Rhinofluimucil.

For the duration of the Vancouver Games, the IOC will carry more than 2,000 tests, of which around 500 will apply to urine EPO detection and 400 will be blood tests. As of February 10, 634 samples have been collected.

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