Amiloride

This page shows anti-doping rule violation data we have registered for Amiloride.

Number of cases in Amiloride Last 10 Years

Amiloride

Amiloride ranks #56 globally among prohibited substances, with 59 registered cases (0.4% of all violations) among all sports tracked by the Anti-Doping Database, which contains 14,670 verified cases. Czech Republic leads with 22 cases, while Bodybuilding is the most affected sport (41 cases).


Cases of Amiloride by Sport
Top Sport: Bodybuilding

41

Bodybuilding cases

0%

Of all violations

59

Total Amiloride cases
Bodybuilding's share of Amiloride violations 0%
41 of 59

Bodybuilding has the most recorded cases of Amiloride violations globally, with 41 registered cases0% of all 59 verified cases.

Cases of Amiloride by Country
Top Country: Czech Republic

22

Czech Republic cases

37.3%

Of all violations

59

Total Amiloride cases
Czech Republic's share of Amiloride violations 37.3%
22 of 59

Czech Republic leads significantly in Amiloride violations globally, with 22 registered cases37.3% of all 59 verified cases.

Global Substance Ranking

Amiloride ranks #56 of 358 prohibited substances in the Anti-Doping Database.

#1 Stanozolol
1,359
#2 Methandienone
833
#3 Norandrosterone
778
#4 Testosterone
758
···
#56 Amiloride
59
About This Ranking

This ranking covers only prohibited substances with verified case records in the Anti-Doping Database. Procedural violations (whereabouts failures, refusals to test, etc.) are excluded.

Active Sanctions — Expiry Year
Gender Distribution
Male 72.9%
43 cases
Female 27.1%
16 cases
Analysis: shows an unusually high proportion of female cases (27.1%) compared to the global average (19.8%), a difference of 7.3 percentage points. Global average: 80.2% male, 19.8% female
Average Suspension Length
38.3
months
Amiloride
30.1
months
Global average

The average suspension for Amiloride violations is 38.3 months, longer than the global average of 30.1 months.

This substance was first listed in the IOC doping list on 1 January 2003 as a diuretic. This substance was first listed in the IOC doping list on 1 January 2003.

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The Anti-Doping Database currently contains 14,670 verified anti-doping rule violations across all sports and all countries, and is updated regularly.