AllRefer Health - Caring for your Well Being  

Home | About | FAQs | Contact Us

AllRefer Channels :: Yellow Pages | Reference | Health  

Health & Medical News  
 Diet & Nutrition
 Diseases & Conditions 
 Health News
 Injuries & Wounds
 Poisons & Overdoses
 Surgery & Procedures 
 Symptoms Guide
 Special Topics
 Tests & Exams
 Pictures & Images
 Medical Encyclopedia

September 2008
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930 

 News Topics
 News Archive
Google
  Web health.allrefer.com   

You are here : AllRefer Health > Health News

Weight-Loss Aids Bought on Internet Might Harm Your Heart
Pills, supplements have potentially dangerous ingredients, lack warning labels, study finds.

Thu May 15, 2008, 17:00
By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter

Story Tools

Printable version

May 15, 2008 News


Related News Categories

Safety & Public Health: Misc

Safety & Public Health

Heart / Stroke-Related: High Blood Pressure

Heart / Stroke-Related: Heart Attack

Dieting To Lower Fat Intake

Dieting To Lose Weight

Diet Drugs


Related News

FDA to List Drugs Under Review for Safety Issues - Sep 05, 2008

No Place Safe From Allergies - Sep 05, 2008

Artery Plaque Rupture Can Occur Without Symptoms - Sep 05, 2008

Think You Are Lead-Free? Check Your Soil - Sep 05, 2008

Scientists ID 2 New Genes for Bowel Disease in Kids - Sep 05, 2008

For Even Healthy Men, Alcohol Seems to Lower Heart Attack Risk - Sep 05, 2008

2 Million Cancer Cases Tied to Tobacco Use - Sep 04, 2008

Most U.S. Kids Getting Recommended Vaccinations - Sep 04, 2008

FDA Demands Tougher Warnings on Immunosuppressive Drugs - Sep 04, 2008

Non-Hospital Baby Abductions a New Concern - Sep 05, 2008

Neighborhood Alcohol Outlets Tied to Kids' Injury Risk - Sep 04, 2008

Even Kids With Known Allergies Can Be Safely Vaccinated - Sep 04, 2008

Defibrillators Don't Diminish Quality of Life - Sep 03, 2008

Kids' Fever Time Cut Using Ibuprofen First - Sep 05, 2008

Doctors Could Play a Part in Preventing Suicides - Sep 03, 2008

THURSDAY, May 15 (HealthDay News) -- Weight-loss supplements widely available for purchase online often include ingredients that are potentially hazardous to your heart, and a new study shows the labels often don't include this warning.

One of the hazardous ingredients that was found in the products has been banned on the U.S. market since 2004, according to study author Dr. Alireza Nazeri, an internist and cardiology research fellow at the Texas Heart Institute at St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, in Houston.

The study was expected to be presented Thursday at the Heart Rhythm Society's annual meeting, in San Francisco.

Nazeri and his colleagues reviewed the ingredients of 12 different brands of weight-loss supplements. They found the brands by entering the common search terms "diet pills" and "weight-loss supplements" into popular Internet search engines, including Google, MSN and Yahoo.

"We were trying to find out if the weight-loss supplements have any ingredients with life-threatening cardiac side effects," Nazeri said.

Next, they made a list of the ingredients on each label. In all, there were 60 different ingredients, for an average of 7.25 ingredients per bottle. Most were herbal extracts, while others were minerals, vitamins and other substances.

Next, the researchers scoured medical databases, including Medline, Pubmed and Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, to find out if there was any significant association between the ingredients and cardiac problems.

They identified 11 ingredients with at least one report of life-threatening cardiac side effects. Eight of the 12 brands contained a potentially hazardous ingredient.

To their surprise, the researchers found one brand included ma huang, also known as Chinese ephedra, even though the U.S. Food and Drug Administration banned it in 2004.

The other ingredients that may be potentially dangerous to the heart included: bitter orange, Camellia sinensis, green tea, buckwheat, guarana, Korean ginseng, licorice root, Synephrine HCl, caffeine anhydrous and citrus aurantium.

"We are not releasing any names of products," said Nazeri. "That was part of our protocol."

The products chosen may be just the tip of the iceberg, and releasing the names may give people the idea the problem is confined to just those brands, said study senior author Dr. Mehdi Razavi, director of the institute's clinical arrhythmia research lab and a clinical associate professor of medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, in Houston.

The study results make sense to Elisa Odabashian, director of the West Coast office of Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports. "It doesn't surprise me at all," she said.

Especially dangerous, she said, is that people often combine these products with coffee or other caffeine-containing drinks, which affect the heart even more.

Odabashian worked on efforts to get ephedra-containing products banned in California. Her advice for consumers thinking of buying weight-loss products over the Internet? "I think it's a crapshoot. I don't think you should be doing it."

More information

To learn more about how to evaluate a weight-loss product, visit American Dietetic Association.

SOURCES: Alireza Nazeri, M.D., internist and cardiology research fellow, Texas Heart Institute, St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, Houston; Mehdi Razavi, M.D., clinical associate professor, medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, and director, clinical arrhythmia laboratory, Texas Heart Institute, St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, Houston; Elisa Odabashian, director, West Coast office, Consumers Union, San Francisco; May 15, 2008, presentation, Heart Rhythm Society annual meeting, San Francisco

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.


Today's Top News Stories

2 Techniques Found Effective in Carotid Artery Narrowing - Sep 06, 2008, 09:00
Angioplasty with stenting and endarterectomy successful in preventing ipsilateral stroke.

MRIs Don't Improve Breast Cancer Care, Outcome - Sep 06, 2008, 19:00
Study finds getting one delays treatment, raises odds of mastectomy.

FDA to List Drugs Under Review for Safety Issues - Sep 05, 2008, 14:00
But officials say patients taking meds on Web site shouldn't overreact or stop taking them.

No Place Safe From Allergies - Sep 05, 2008, 16:00
Most can be controlled, but you need to know what triggers them, experts say.

Almost Half of Adults Will Develop Knee Osteoarthritis by 85 - Sep 05, 2008, 14:00
Study finds risk is greatest for those overweight or obese at age 45.







Featured Topics

Alzheimer's Disease

High Blood Pressure

Crohn's Disease

Impotence

Overactive Bladder


Content Provided by HealthDay

Copyright © 2007 Par Web Solutions All Rights reserved.
Health Topics: A-Al Am-Az B C-Cj Ck-Cz D E F G H I J K L M N O P-Pl Pm-Pz Q R S-Sl Sm-Sz T U V W X Y Z 0-9
About Us | Help | Privacy Policy | Editorial Policy | Advertising Policy | Accessibility | Terms of Use
Contact Us | Link to Us | User Satisfaction Survey | Healthopedia.com

The information provided herein is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. The information should not be used during any medical emergency or for the diagnosis or treatment of any medical condition. A licensed physician should be consulted for diagnosis and treatment of any and all medical conditions. Call your local emergency number for all medical emergencies. Use of this online service is subject to the disclaimer and the terms and conditions. Links to other sites are provided for information only -- they do not constitute endorsements of those other sites.
Page Last Updated: 06 Sep, 2008