Trace Amount Of Cocaine Found In Red Bull
Six German States Tell Retailers To Stop Selling Energy Red Bull Cola
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Play CBS Video Video Germany Bans Red Bull Cola Trace amounts of cocaine were found in Red Bull Cola, prompting Germany to ban the product. Dr. Jennifer Ashton explains the health risks for consumers to Maggie Rodriguez.
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Six German states have told retailers to stop selling Red Bull Cola energy drinks after a test found a trace amount of cocaine. (CBS)
The bans started Friday after a sample test conducted by authorities in North Rhine-Westphalia state found 0.4 micrograms per liter in the drink.
Five other German states also banned it from shops amid concerns over possible narcotics law violations.
On the The Early Show Tuesday, co-anchor Maggie Rodriguez pointed out the drink being banned is Red Bull Cola -- not Red Bull Energy Drink.
Early Show medical correspondent Dr. Jennifer Ashton said cola is made from the coca plant. The coca plant, indigenous to South America, is used as a stimulant in many drinks. She said the dangerous chemical -- the alkaloid cocaine component -- should be removed during processing.
Ashton added that a byproduct of cocaine was found in the test -- not active cocaine. The drug equivalent dose, she said, would be drinking 12,000 liters of the drink.
Germany's Federal Institute for Risk Assessment said Monday that the cocaine level was too low to pose a health risk. It planned to produce a more detailed report Wednesday.
Red Bull said its cola is "harmless and marketable in both the U.S. and Europe." It said similar coca leaf extracts are used worldwide as flavoring, and a test it commissioned itself found no cocaine traces.
But even without traces of cocaine, Ashton said caffeinated energy drinks can have adverse effects on people with pre-existing heart conditions or children who might be more sensitive to powerful stimulating effects on the body.
Large doses of caffeine, she said, can increase heart rate and blood pressure and may induce heart attacks, strokes and respiratory illness.
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- And none of the other crap in those drinks is problematic?
- Reply to this comment
- If a poster can type in french? Why not type in english?
Posted by Dgunner at 7:41 AM : May 27, 2009
Ahhh, is that supposed to make sense?
What you should have said was: If the poster can read the article, which is in English, then surely he can also type his/her comment in English. - Reply to this comment
- If a poster can type in french? Why not type in english? Are they conspiring to take all the red bull? I better order some now. If the possibilty of war were to break out ? The fench would have all the good wine and red bull and still NO GUTS!
- Reply to this comment
- Why don`t all of you read articles dispassionately without any preconceived ideas?
The paragraph that begins, "Ashton added ... " states unequivocally that there is no cocaine in Red Bull, just an infinitesimally active by-product (probably benzoylecgonine).
In all probability, the reporter misinterpreted Ashton`s comments.
Ashton said that cocaine, "the dangerous component", should be removed during processing.
Clearly, it was, because no cocaine was found in the Red Bull, just the by-product, which, for all practical purposes, is inactive. - Reply to this comment
- bonjour a vous
des traces de cocaine dans la "boisson" red bull cola, pas étonnant si on considére "l'engouement des adolescents, quand a cette boisson, une autre maniére discréte de faire consommer cette "saleté"pardonnez le terme a nos enfants, des traces aussi infimes soient-elles a la longue sont dangereuses..pour la santé de nos enfants...curieux qu'on ne le découvre que maintenant..et dire qu'on n'arrete d pas de vanter les vertus de cette "boisson", rien d'étonnant.. la cigarette tue elle aussi, mais on continue quand meme a vanter ses "bienfaits" ou va-t-on..je me le demande.
au revoir - Reply to this comment
- If this is true, then let's have Coca-Cola move to the same plant and go back to the good ol' days of the original Coke formula!
Jokes aside (and there are plenty), you'd have to drink so much to get any kind of 'effect' that you'd die from a number of other problems related to drinking that much cola long before you'd get your 'high'. But it does make one wonder if Red Bull Cola might be replacing Coke as a mixer with alcohol...... - Reply to this comment
- You've managed to make a comment whose content is 99.99% inflammatory opinion with approximately 0.01% relevance - and only by inference, at that - to the article in question.
Posted by ibsteve2u at 7:04 PM : May 26, 2009
You're just jealous you didn't think of it first. - Reply to this comment
- Congrats, weedapoopl. You've managed to make a comment whose content is 99.99% inflammatory opinion with approximately 0.01% relevance - and only by inference, at that - to the article in question.
- Reply to this comment
- Ha! Conservative values strike in Germany, of all places.
I thought Europe was so progressive. Legalized marijuana, socialism, no religion - a liberal's paradise.
I would have thought Europeans would demand MORE cocaine in their soft drinks.
Get the Eurokiddies started early. Why deny them the fun of being an Eurogrownup?
Let them enjoy it while they're young.
Hey, they let kids drink beer there. - Reply to this comment
- I simply asked why she would be talking about caffeine in an article about cocaine. I think that she would have served her point in a story about caffeine, and I always get suspicious when people switch the subject, they usually are avoiding something, or trying to advocate something else, and if they can't just come to the point, the questions I posed become the questions I ask.
Hey even too much water is harmful, even more people don't know that, so I don't see how an article about cocaine becomes an article about caffeine.
Posted by brianbwb-2009 at 10:25 AM : May 26, 2009
Because it's an article about Red Bull. - Reply to this comment
- "I thought the point was quite clear. Caffeine is potentially harmful. Lots of people don't know that, and she was trying to educate. There is no evidence that she was trying to make it illegal or push some other product. Why would you think that?"
I usually include the poster's sig in my replies, but somehow yours does not appear.
I simply asked why she would be talking about caffeine in an article about cocaine. I think that she would have served her point in a story about caffeine, and I always get suspicious when people switch the subject, they usually are avoiding something, or trying to advocate something else, and if they can't just come to the point, the questions I posed become the questions I ask.
Hey even too much water is harmful, even more people don't know that, so I don't see how an article about cocaine becomes an article about caffeine. - Reply to this comment
- So to Ashton, I would ask what the point is in bringing up the topic of caffeine, when the original issue was cocaine?
Is it that you now want caffeine to be illegal? Or is it that you want to see Red Bull pulled from the shelves? Do you have a financial interest in any of its competitors?
Just what point is she trying to make, I wonder...
Posted by brianbwb-2009 at 7:47 AM : May 26, 2009
I thought the point was quite clear. Caffeine is potentially harmful. Lots of people don't know that, and she was trying to educate. There is no evidence that she was trying to make it illegal or push some other product. Why would you think that? - Reply to this comment
- Cocaine ? So? Remember it use to be legal in the USA. Make it leagal again and you could cut the crime rate in half. People wouldn;t kill over it. You could close half the prisons. But then a lot of people would be out of jobs.
Knowing the laws of the world they will keep it Illegal to give people jobs.
Remember most of the people who deal and use cocaine should be killed or die.
They are not the smartest people in the world. - Reply to this comment
- Pity the poor guy who stopped at the local store to get a quick pep-me-up, only to find out when he gets to work that today is HIS day for the random drug test!
- Reply to this comment
- how absurd! did you all not pay attention to the information that a person would need to drink 12,000 liters of red bull for it to have the impact of cocaine? i believe that death from excessive fluid intake would occur long before any 'high' could be experienced.
be afraid. be very afraid. make sure that nothing could ever possibly, in any way, shape, and or form hurt you. stay at home, bar the windows, and stop watching network news... - Reply to this comment
- Here is a strange article, the person Ashton debunks the assertion that there is cocaine in the drink, which should effectively end the argument, but then she changes the subject to decry caffeine, which is a legal substance. People who know they have problems with caffeine, but still choose to consume it, are fools who should be left to their own devices.
So to Ashton, I would ask what the point is in bringing up the topic of caffeine, when the original issue was cocaine?
Is it that you now want caffeine to be illegal? Or is it that you want to see Red Bull pulled from the shelves? Do you have a financial interest in any of its competitors?
Just what point is she trying to make, I wonder... - Reply to this comment
- LOL! Coca leaf extract as a FLAVORING? What a lame excuse................
Posted by tbird6740 at 4:21 AM
Yeah dude, where do you think the coca in coca-cola comes from?
Its a flavoring now, but it used to be an active ingredient early ;last century.
Cocaine-Cola=coca-cola
Yummy! Coke! - Reply to this comment
- One would thing that CBS would check out some of their spelling and facts.
Posted by I_am_me1953
Yeah, one would thing - Reply to this comment
- Ha!
They should legalize that stuff anyway - Reply to this comment
- What a paranoid world we live in
- Reply to this comment
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