Gabapentin: What Is It?

The news last week that leading trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. has been suspended for 15 days and fined $500 by the Pennsylvania Racing Commission—pending appeal—after one of his trainees tested positive for the substance gabapentin after winning a graded stake at Presque Isle Downs last September, led to a collective head scratch.

What exactly is gabapentin?

“It is a drug that is used as an anti-convulsant in people. It is also used for neurotrophic pain—in other words, pain originating from nerves,” said former California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) director, Rick Arthur. “For example, if you have shingles, they're likely to put you on gabapentin.”

According to the government run MedlinePlus website, gabapentin is commonly prescribed to help control certain types of seizures in people who have epilepsy, and works by decreasing abnormal excitement in the brain.

Common gabapentin medications include Horizant, Gralise, and Neurontin.

Its use in human medicine has increased as an alternative pain relief to highly addictive opioids, said Arthur. But “frankly, it is not very effective,” he added, of the orally administered drug. 

Gabapentin is a Class 3, penalty category B drug according to the Association of Racing Commissioners International, meaning it is deemed to have certain uses in racehorses.

Under the Horse Racing and Integrity Act's (HISA) impending anti-doping and medication control (ADMC) program, gabapentin is listed as a category B controlled substance. This means it is permitted for use in certain windows. 

When HISA's ADMC goes into effect on March 27, a first-time gabapentin positive comes with a possible 15-day suspension, a fine of up to $1,000, and automatic disqualification of the race-day results.

According to HISA's chief of science, Mary Scollay, because gabapentin is listed in the HISA technical document as an anti-convulsant, “I expect there could be successful legal argument that it's not an analgesic.”

So, for what kinds of issues can gabapentin be used to treat in horses?

“It was advocated about 10, 15 years ago as a way to treat navicular disease,” Arthur said. “But that kind of fell apart as it didn't work.”

It is also used to treat lameness in horses, “but more as a desperation move when they don't know what it is,” he added.

Because of its use as an anti-anxiety medication in humans, some say it has the same potential off-label use for horses, too.

Neither Southern California-based private veterinarian, Ryan Carpenter, nor current CHRB equine medical director, Jeff Blea, are aware of gabapentin being used as a calming agent in racehorses. Though Blea admitted that it could have that effect. 

According to the CHRB's stewards rulings webpage, there have been roughly 18 individual gabapentin positives in California since 2005.

“For the most part, they were normally cases where the humans associated with the horse were on gabapentin,” said Arthur, explaining how most cases were ruled instances of environmental contamination.

“We have no idea how the transfer occurs. We were suspicious that it was secondary contamination from someone urinating in the stall but we never confirmed that,” he said. 

In one instance, an off-track veterinarian had prescribed gabapentin to a dog that was brought to the barn, said Arthur. 

“We assumed it was from urine,” said Arthur, when asked about how the transfer was made. “Why someone would let a dog urinate in the stall I don't know. 

While the relationship between a person or an animal prescribed gabapentin and a positive finding in a horse is clear “in most cases,” said Arthur, “there were a number of instances where there was no explanation for it other than the horse being administered gabapentin.”

According to Arthur, if the reported finding shows gabapentin at nanograms in the low single digits, that is typically an indication of environmental contamination. 

“If it's up over 15, 20 nanograms, I would expect that to be an intentional administration,” said Arthur. “We had one case around 100 nanograms, which would be impossible to explain by accidental contamination.”

The Pennsylvania Racing Commission did not publish the amount at which gabapentin was found in Artie's Princess's (We Miss Artie) post-race sample. However, Joseph told the TDN last week that the horse tested positive at a level that should be considered below the recognized threshold level.

Joseph also told the TDN that the horse was tested 24 hours before the race by the same laboratory. “The horse was negative and was then positive the next day when no vet treated her. How is that possible? The proof is in the pudding,” said Joseph. 

According to Arthur, “you would not expect this drug to work for more than 12 to 24 hours in any sense as an analgesic or pain reducing medication.”

The post Gabapentin: What Is It? appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Why Straights Are Better Than Flushes!

I know, you’re reading this headline and scratching your head. A flush beats a straight, you say to yourself. How is a straight better than a flush? Well, what if I also told you that pocket fives are better than pocket aces?

All joking aside, what I mean by this is that hands like straights and pocket fives can reap you more money in the long run because they can make strong hands that are well hidden. It’s not enough to make a strong hand in hold’em; you also need to get paid off on that hand to make it worthwhile.

Players are always very wary when three of a suit lands on the board in hold’em and the presence of the third card often slows down the betting. Potential straight cards, on the other hand, don’t always have the same effect. Consider a flop of 9-J-2, with you holding 10-Q. If an 8 comes on the river, you are likely to get paid off, whereas if you were drawing to a flush maybe you don’t reap as much. Why are players more wary of flushes? That is a hard one to explain. Perhaps it’s easier to keep up with the symbols on the cards than worrying about counting five cards in a row. After all, in school we learn how to match symbols together, but they don’t teach us that “jack” comes after “ten.”

The reason I say that pocket fives are better than pocket aces is the greater potential to win a player’s stack. You will usually only get enough betting action to win a player’s stack with pocket aces if your opponent has pocket kings. If you flop a set of aces against opponents, you likely have the deck locked up and are therefore unlikely to get much action unless one opponent has the case ace in his hand.

With small pocket pairs like 5-5, however, when you flop a set you stand to win a nice pot because your hand is hidden. Players are conditioned to look out for high cards on the flop. If you are up against a player who has raised pre-flop with Q-Q, he is going to be wary of a king or ace hitting the flop. If that flop comes J-6-5, and he bets, you can raise and he may push all in to “protect” his hand. There lies the value of the small pocket pair.

Hoyt Corkins told me his favorite pocket pair is 6-6, and there is a good reason for it. If the board comes with a 2-3-4-5 then anyone with an ace may pay him off, hoping he doesn’t really have a six in his hand to make the higher straight.

Remember that in any poker game it’s not how great a hand you can make, but how great a hand that you can get paid off that matters the most.

Reach Johnny Kampis at dealmeincolumn@hotmail.com.

Pletcher Has Solid Duo In Quest For Sixth Tampa Bay Derby Triumph

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher is set to seek his sixth victory in the Grade 3, $400,000 Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby on Saturday in the 43rd edition of the 3-year-old showcase at Tampa Bay Downs in Oldsmar, Fla.

Pletcher, who last won the race in 2017 with Tapwrit, has entered two horses in the 1 1/16-mile Road to the Kentucky Derby prep race: Tapit Trice, a gray colt owned by Whisper Hill Farm, and Gainesway Stable, and Shesterkin, a dark bay owned by Robert V. LaPenta.

Tapit Trice and Shesterkin are part of a 12-horse field for the Tampa Bay Derby, which is the 11th race on a 12-race card. The Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby should go off around 5:15 p.m. ET. Post time for Saturday's first race is 11:55 a.m.

The Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby is one of five stakes worth a combined $1-million in purse money Saturday. Also on tap are the 25th running of the G2, $225,000 Hillsborough Stakes, for fillies and mares 4-years-old-and-upward at 1 1/8 miles on the turf course; the 40th edition of the G3, $200,000 Florida Oaks, for 3-year-old fillies going 1 1/16 miles on the turf; the 32nd running of the G3, $100,000 Michelob Ultra Challenger Stakes, for horses 4-and-upward at 1 1/16 miles on the main track; and the 17th running of the $75,000 Columbia Stakes, for 3-year-olds racing a mile on the turf.

The five stakes races comprise an additional 50-cent Pick 5 wagering opportunity on the seventh through 11th races..

The Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby awards 50 Kentucky Derby qualifying points to the winner and 20, 15, 10 and 5 to the next four finishers.

Tapit Trice, who drew the No. 6 post position for the Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby, and Shesterkin, who drew the No. 9 post, finished 1-2 in an allowance/optional claiming race on Feb. 4 at Gulfstream Park, with Tapit Trice drawing off for an eight-length victory from his stablemate. Both horses worked out Saturday at Pletcher's Palm Beach Downs base in Delray Beach, with Tapit Trice breezing 4 furlongs in 49.34 seconds and Shesterkin being timed in a more leisurely 51.68.

Luis Saez again will ride Tapit Trice, while Edgard Zayas has been named on Shesterkin.

Here is the field for the Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby in post position order, with horse, trainer and jockey listed:

1. Lord Miles, Saffie A. Joseph, Jr., Paco Lopez

2. Classic Car Wash, Mark Casse, Emisael Jaramillo

3. Classic Legacy, Bill Mott, Irad Ortiz, Jr.

4. Groveland, Eoin Harty, Daniel Centeno

5. Mikey Bananas, Tim Hamm, Pablo Morales

6. Tapit Trice, Todd Pletcher, Luis Saez

7. Freedom Road, Gregg Sacco, Hector Rafael Diaz, Jr.

8. Dreaming of Kona, Aldana Spieth, Scott Spieth

9. Shesterkin, Todd Pletcher, Edgard Zayas

10. Champions Dream, Mark Casse, Antonio Gallardo

11. Zydeceaux, Ramon Minguet, Samuel Marin

12. Prairie Hawk, Saffie A. Joseph, Jr., Samy Camacho

The post Pletcher Has Solid Duo In Quest For Sixth Tampa Bay Derby Triumph appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights