"Why do people like me have to suffer from the mistakes of irresponsible athletes?" three-time Olympic medallist Isinbayeva told reporters.
A World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) independent commission last week published a damning report that alleged Russian athletics were plagued with state-sponsored doping and large-scale corruption, and recommended that track and field athletes be barred from international competition.
The IAAF on Friday handed the Russian athletics federation a provisional suspension, sparking indignation among the country's brightest track and field stars.
Russian sporting officials have announced a three-month plan to revamp athletics in time for track and field stars to participate in the Rio de Janeiro Games in August 2016.
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Former WADA head Dick Pound -- who served as the head of the independent commission -- said that Russia's participation in Rio would depend on its ability to promptly clean up its act.
"Pound said it was a shame that I was a victim of the system," Isinbayeva said. "But I am not a victim of the system. I am outside it."
"There are discussions going on about this in sporting circles," Isinbayeva said of the prospect of Russian track and field athletes competing as independents in Rio. "But I don't know whether this is even possible."
World champion hurdler Sergei Shubenkov -- the 25-year-old son of prominent Soviet heptathlete Natalya Shubenkova -- deplored he could relive his mother's exclusion of the 1984 Los Angeles Games, which the Soviet Union boycotted.