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ECHO Comment: "Fears of Witch-hunt Against Liverpool FC" part 3

There is a guy posts on here whose breath smells of vaginal thrush, can the turbo inhaler help with that?
We could go REALLY deep in some chat about fluid dynamics of particulate sizes through the human airway but, long story short, turbohaler is probably more likely to cause oral thrush

@EverTheOptimist i always recommend to patients that they use their inhaled steroids prior to brushing their teeth, as they will then rinse out their mouth and therefore excess steroid. You could also use a spacer device.

I also recommend for similar patients, in the case of bad breath, to remove their tongue from Klopp's hoop
 
Ok.

Before Klopp and his team of medics arrived at Liverpool they were already under testing and preparing for it as this indicates:

"Professor John Dickinson: The rumour I saw was 63%, as you say. There is no official data out there on this. A club is not going to pin the number of players that are using various medications on a board somewhere. I think that’s what this is - a rumour. Where it came from, who knows?

Back in 2010/11 I did screen the club’s first-team squad and we published a paper on it. That was back in the days when Dr Peter Brukner was Head of Sports Medicine and Science at Liverpool and Zafar Iqbal was first-team doctor.

About 25% of the players had exercise-induced asthma. A lot of clubs wouldn’t have let us publish that data, but they saw it as, ‘We’re doing best practice here and we want to tell everyone about it."



Under Klopp we can guess this the intervention went much further...the culture was already established and I'd guess he took it to another level.

The undercurrent to the Buvac departure (as I posted on here) was that he disagreed with Klopp over when the optimum moment to have a cycle down season was and Klopp backed his medics over him.
But prof Dickinson he says the 63% is an unsubstantiated rumour, and when he was working with the club the figure was only 25% of them had "sports induced asthma" and this percentage is a lot lower than in other sports. He implies the number is about normal or even less than normal. Swimming for example had 70% of the athletes with sports induced asthma. I've never heard of sports induced asthma before.

In a separate YouTube vid he says pretty much all inhalers won't help athletes in fact they raise the heart rate which is likely to be detrimental. He does say that some oral pills are available temporarily and they do have a sports enhancing capacity because they limit inflammation and thereby allowing an athlete to recover quickly but they are generally only prescribed to people who are very ill in hospital and have lots of other side affects.

Is prof John Dickinson the origin of the rumours? Because he suggests the opposite of what seems to be the rumour?

I'm genuinely interested, is there info from somewhere else other than Dickinson that I can read? Thanks
 

But prof Dickinson he says the 63% is an unsubstantiated rumour, and when he was working with the club the figure was only 25% of them had "sports induced asthma" and this percentage is a lot lower than in other sports. He implies the number is about normal or even less than normal. Swimming for example had 70% of the athletes with sports induced asthma. I've never heard of sports induced asthma before.

In a separate YouTube vid he says pretty much all inhalers won't help athletes in fact they raise the heart rate which is likely to be detrimental. He does say that some oral pills are available temporarily and they do have a sports enhancing capacity because they limit inflammation and thereby allowing an athlete to recover quickly but they are generally only prescribed to people who are very ill in hospital and have lots of other side affects.

Is prof John Dickinson the origin of the rumours? Because he suggests the opposite of what seems to be the rumour?

I'm genuinely interested, is there info from somewhere else other than Dickinson that I can read? Thanks
sniffing.gif
 
But prof Dickinson he says the 63% is an unsubstantiated rumour, and when he was working with the club the figure was only 25% of them had "sports induced asthma" and this percentage is a lot lower than in other sports. He implies the number is about normal or even less than normal. Swimming for example had 70% of the athletes with sports induced asthma. I've never heard of sports induced asthma before.

In a separate YouTube vid he says pretty much all inhalers won't help athletes in fact they raise the heart rate which is likely to be detrimental. He does say that some oral pills are available temporarily and they do have a sports enhancing capacity because they limit inflammation and thereby allowing an athlete to recover quickly but they are generally only prescribed to people who are very ill in hospital and have lots of other side affects.

Is prof John Dickinson the origin of the rumours? Because he suggests the opposite of what seems to be the rumour?

I'm genuinely interested, is there info from somewhere else other than Dickinson that I can read? Thanks
You raise many important questions.

Most importantly, how does Dickinson get around the swear filter?
 
But prof Dickinson he says the 63% is an unsubstantiated rumour, and when he was working with the club the figure was only 25% of them had "sports induced asthma" and this percentage is a lot lower than in other sports. He implies the number is about normal or even less than normal. Swimming for example had 70% of the athletes with sports induced asthma. I've never heard of sports induced asthma before.

In a separate YouTube vid he says pretty much all inhalers won't help athletes in fact they raise the heart rate which is likely to be detrimental. He does say that some oral pills are available temporarily and they do have a sports enhancing capacity because they limit inflammation and thereby allowing an athlete to recover quickly but they are generally only prescribed to people who are very ill in hospital and have lots of other side affects.

Is prof John Dickinson the origin of the rumours? Because he suggests the opposite of what seems to be the rumour?

I'm genuinely interested, is there info from somewhere else other than Dickinson that I can read? Thanks
What in the dickinsons is this
 
But prof Dickinson he says the 63% is an unsubstantiated rumour, and when he was working with the club the figure was only 25% of them had "sports induced asthma" and this percentage is a lot lower than in other sports. He implies the number is about normal or even less than normal. Swimming for example had 70% of the athletes with sports induced asthma. I've never heard of sports induced asthma before.

In a separate YouTube vid he says pretty much all inhalers won't help athletes in fact they raise the heart rate which is likely to be detrimental. He does say that some oral pills are available temporarily and they do have a sports enhancing capacity because they limit inflammation and thereby allowing an athlete to recover quickly but they are generally only prescribed to people who are very ill in hospital and have lots of other side affects.

Is prof John Dickinson the origin of the rumours? Because he suggests the opposite of what seems to be the rumour?

I'm genuinely interested, is there info from somewhere else other than Dickinson that I can read? Thanks
Hi mate,

You’re drug cheats

Thanks mate

x
 

And yet he’ll go missing on here until something happens with City or Newcastle won’t you @EverTheOptimist? Utter fraud of a poster


He pops in every few days currently. Unless Liverpool get absolutely outclassed by European royalty in a CL final, in which case he'll wander off into the woods for about 2 weeks
 

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