The official laboratory must have sufficient personnel to perform all analytical procedures required for the identification and forensic proof of a medication violation. The chemist responsible for the operation of the analytical testing laboratory must be a member in good standing of the Association of Official Racing Chemists.
The commission laboratory must be equipped with sufficient laboratory equipment and personnel to perform:
quantitative analyses consistent with commission standards in those cases where an exact quantitative value is warranted.
Urine and serum or plasma samples must be subjected to sufficient analytical procedures to ensure that the medication rules of the commission are not violated. The exact analytical techniques performed must be determined by contract with the commission in consultation with the commission veterinarian and must include, at a minimum, the following:
qualitative screening analysis of serum or plasma or urine or hair samples for the presence of any medication and metabolites, substance foreign to the natural horse, androgenic anabolic steroids, or endogenous, dietary, or environmental substance without regulatory limits that may result in a positive test; and
confirmation of overage and positive test results using mass spectrometry and laboratory criteria that meet or exceed commission requirements.
The chemist employed by the commission-contracted laboratory shall report the results of the sample analyses to the commission veterinarian, executive director, and deputy director as described by contract with the commission.
The official laboratory shall be accredited by and in good standing with the Racing Medication Testing Consortium accreditation program.
9 SR 2527; 24 SR 1568; 39 SR 1739; 40 SR 1393
April 25, 2016
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes