Frog Cells Turned Drug Detectors 16
An Anonymous Coward writes: "Saw on Webdrift that New Scientist has an article on color-changing frog cells and that they could be used to drug test athletes. Apparently the cells are particularly good at detecting opiate drugs, and you don't even have to know which one you're testing for!"
Performance Enhancing Drugs? (Score:3, Informative)
OK, so Brett Favre had a good season while high on hydrocodone, but I doubt you'll see many players from other sports where speed, agility and mental clarity are more important than avoiding pain using these drugs.
Re:Performance Enhancing Drugs? (Score:1)
The one thing I have to say in the writer's defence is that opiates can be used to dull the pain caused by lactic acids resulting from anaerobic respiration, such as pushing yourself harder than your oxygen supply will allow, or doing the 100m (done anaerobically) without having to think about the pain which will come at the end. Admittedly, 100m runners don't actually think of the pain at all because of their mental training, but some events would be affected by any lack of pain.
Why opiates? (Score:2)
poppy seeds (Score:3, Insightful)
Hopefully they will only use this as a primary test, and use more discriminating tests to distinguish *which* opiates are present in people who test positive
Re:poppy seeds (Score:1)
Yes, I agree. I have never taken any illegal drugs in my life, but when I go in for a Nazi drug test, I am always worry whether or not it'll be a false postive and I'll be labeled a drug attic.
When will the idiots realize that hiring some nimrod to pour chemicals (and now frog cells) onto people's piss won't solve any social problems! Yeah, it may keep a few atheletes from competing or some crack addicts from using heavy machinery, but how many innocent people's lives have been ruined? The real abusers find ways to bypass the tests anyway...
Re:poppy seeds (Score:1)
Re:poppy seeds (Score:1)
Yeah yeah. I attended school in the US pwublick educayshonel swysshem. So kill me.
Strange Emphasis (Score:4, Insightful)
The sensor has other uses too. Since it changes colour with any chemical that acts like an opiate, it could be used to screen chemical compounds for useful opiate drugs, says Bayley.
I would have thought that this was more valuable to society - the ability to rapidly screen thousands of compounds for potential activity of a specific type. The process sounds like it may lend itself to similar screening of compounds of other types which bind to cell membrane receptors. But these researchers apparent first thought was about how they could use it to identify evil drug abusers, including people abusing something never before seen which has the same effects. Maybe there's more money in helping find drug abusers.
Frog cells? (Score:1)