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May 1, 2009 5:02 PM

FDA Recalls Weight Drug Hydroxycut

By
CBSNews
(AP)  U.S. government health officials warned dieters and body builders Friday to immediately stop using the Canadian-made supplement Hydroxycut, linked to cases of serious liver damage and at least one death.

The Food and Drug Administration said the maker of the dietary supplement has agreed to recall 14 Hydroxycut products. Available in grocery stores and pharmacies, Hydroxycut is advertised as made from natural ingredients. At least 9 million packages were sold last year, the FDA said.

Dr. Linda Katz of the FDA's food and nutrition division said the agency has received 23 reports of liver problems, including the death of a 19-year-old boy. The teenager died in 2007, and the death was reported to the FDA this March.

Other patients experienced symptoms ranging from jaundice, or yellowing of the skin, to liver failure. One received a transplant and another was placed on a list to await a new liver.

There was no immediate comment from the U.S. distributor of the diet pill, Iovate Health Sciences, headquartered near Buffalo, New York. Hydroxycut is used by people trying to shed pounds and by body builders to sharpen their muscles.

Dietary supplements aren't as tightly regulated by the government as medications. Manufacturers don't need to prove to the FDA that their products are safe and effective before they can sell them to consumers. But regulators monitor aftermarket reports for signs of trouble, and in recent years companies have been put under stricter requirements to alert the FDA when they learn of problems.

Katz said it has taken so long to get a handle on the Hydroxycut problem because the cases of liver damage were rare and the FDA has no authority to review supplements before they're marketed. "Part of the problem is that the FDA looks at dietary supplements from a post-market perspective, and an isolated incident is often difficult to follow," she said.

The FDA relies on voluntary reports to detect such problems, and many cases are never reported, officials acknowledge.

Health officials said they have been unable to determine which Hydroxycut ingredients are potentially toxic, partially because the formulation of the products has changed several times. A medical journal report last month raised questions about one ingredient, hydroxycitric acid, derived from a tropical fruit. The article said it could potentially damage the liver.

AP
Add a Comment See all 31 Comments
by skater2bob August 16, 2009 9:27 PM EDT
LUCIFER SATAN! WE USE AT OUR RISK. DON'T HELP ME. THE OBAMA BUNCH WAT TO HELP ME. NO WAY. THE GOV CLOSED THE MUSTANG RANCH AND TRIED TO RUN IT AND THEY FAILED. THE WORST DRUG IN THE WORLD IS USED BY 68% OF THE PEOPLE. AND NO ONE SAYS MUCH ABOUT IT. IT CAUSES PEOPLE TO WHIP THEIR WIVES, BEAT THEIR KIDS, KILL THEIR FRINDS AND ALL KINDS OF LUCIFER SATAN STUF. ALCOHOL. MOST AMERICANS ARE ALCOHOLICS. 5 DRINKS A WEEK OR 5 IN ONE SITTING. B S ON ALL THE DOGODDERS BOUT CIGS AND DOBACCO. AND FAT KILLING DRUGS. B S
END OF STORY.
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by godluvsu2 May 5, 2009 11:36 PM EDT
I am a nurse and can tell you that i have taken care of people with severe, life threatening health problems due to diet pills. Diet and exercise are the ONLY 100% safe ways to lose weight. I'm telling you, I would never take these types of pills. i saw a girl younger than myself ( I'm 30) with diffuse blood clots which could've cause her to have a stroke or pulmonary embolism at any moment. I felt so bad for her. She had kids and was single again. Just wanted to look good so she believed the label that the drugs were safe and took them. Ended up in ICU having a filter put in to keep clots from going to her heart/lungs...
So sad when things like this happen. People are too trusting- ALWAYS do the research before starting things like this...
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by jasonblle May 4, 2009 10:40 AM EDT
Same people have been in a suit before, here is link: http://www.steroidology.com/forum/supplement-forum/92207-another-muscle-tech-law-suit.html
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by bwlewis1964 May 4, 2009 10:12 AM EDT
Good marketing has convinced us that there's a magic pill, U name it there's a pill to
fix it.
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by barbaram99 May 2, 2009 2:09 PM EDT
i see ads for all sorts stuff and it raises a red flag. There is a no magic pill to lost wt. I don't buy them..
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by honestabe8 May 2, 2009 11:06 AM EDT
The supplement is vital for responsible users to reduce weight and stay active.
Posted by sean56z

Sean: Does that imply that people cannot be active without that, or any, supplement?
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by quapawsix May 2, 2009 10:45 AM EDT
People read the warning labels most drugs and even the one's given by Doctors cause these types of problems read the warning everything you consume goes through your liver and kidneys. You add all the other things you put into you body, also adds to the chances of complication. Think what happens to your water filter on your pool or your drinking water if you don't maintain the filters.
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by honestabe8 May 2, 2009 8:26 AM EDT
apple2pie: if it is at an accident scene, it probably wasn't the intoxicant that killed, rather it is the accident.
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by honestabe8 May 2, 2009 8:22 AM EDT
skin = skinny
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by honestabe8 May 2, 2009 8:21 AM EDT
it seems that this product is advertised by having fit looking people say something like "i lost 35 lbs FAST". if you are looking for "fast weight loss", then you are likely to damage your health. if it took a while to put on, it will not disappear overnight. being skin is about diet, being fit is about exercise
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