Food Suppliments
Food Suppliments
Food Suppliments
We Americans do love our dietary supplements. More than half of the adult population have taken them to stay healthy, lose weight,
gain an edge in sports or in the bedroom, and avoid using prescription drugs. In 2009, we spent $26.7 billion on them, according to
the Nutrition Business Journal, a trade publication.
What consumers might not realize, though, is that supplement manufacturers routinely, and legally, sell their products without first
having to demonstrate that they are safe and effective. The Food and Drug Administration has not made full use of even the meager
authority granted it by the industry-friendly 1994 Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA).
As a result, the supplement marketplace is not as safe as it should be.
We have identified a dozen supplement ingredients that we think consumers should avoid because of health risks, including
cardiovascular, liver, and kidney problems. We found products with those ingredients readily available in stores and online.
Because of inadequate quality control and inspection, supplements contaminated with heavy metals, pesticides, or prescription
drugs have been sold to unsuspecting consumers. And FDA rules covering manufacturing quality don't apply to the companies
that supply herbs, vitamins, and other raw ingredients.
China, which has repeatedly been caught exporting contaminated products, is a major supplier of raw supplement ingredients.
John Coolidge
Photo: Grant Dotson
Consider the path to market of Go Away Gray, a product that is claimed to "help stop your hair from turning gray." Cathy Beggan,
president of the supplement's maker, Rise-N-Shine, based in New Jersey, said that her company has not had to provide product
information to the FDA. Nor did it conduct any clinical trials of the supplement, which includes a natural enzyme called catalase,
before putting it on sale. Beggan pointed us to a study by European researchers published in the July 2009 issue of the Federation of
American Societies for Experimental Biology Journal. The study found that gray hair had lower-than-normal levels of catalase but
did not prove that taking that enzyme by mouth would stop hair from turning gray. "We are working on getting an actual clinical trial
going because the results have been so amazing, and it would just be good to have some concrete data behind it," Beggan said.
Exaggerated claims
It's against the law for companies to claim that any supplement can prevent, treat, or cure any disease except some nutrient-deficiency
conditions. But in the past two years, the Federal Trade Commission has filed or settled 30 cases against supplement marketers,
charging that they made exactly those kinds of claims. It reached a $7.5 million settlement with the QVC home-shopping channel.
And the FDA has recently taken legal action against a few supplement manufacturers that claimed their products could prevent or
treat a disease.
Undercover investigators from the Government Accountability Office, posing as elderly consumers, caught salespeople on tape
dispensing potentially harmful medical advice. In one case, a salesperson told an investigator that a garlic supplement could be taken
in lieu of high blood pressure medicine.
bodybuilding supplements that contained synthetic steroids or steroid-like substances, 50 sexual-enhancement products that
contained sildenafil (Viagra) or other erectile-dysfunction drugs, and 40 weight-loss supplements containing sibutramine (Meridia)
and other drugs.
Unwitting purchasers
"We're talking about very serious risks and injuries that can happen to people
and often young peoplewho do not understand that they're taking
prescription drugs and steroids," Joshua M. Sharfstein, M.D., the FDA's
principal deputy commissioner, told the U.S. Senate's special committee on
aging in May 2010.
In 2005, eager to make the most of his baseball scholarship at Lincoln
University in Jefferson City, Mo., Jareem Gunter started taking a supplement
he found online that promised to improve his athletic performance and claimed
to be "legal," he recalls. But he soon began feeling fatigued, and when the
whites of his eyes turned yellow, he said, he went to the hospital. "I woke up in
the morning and the doctor was sitting by my bedside," Gunter said. "He told
me, Your liver's failed. You only had a couple of days left to live if you hadn't
come in.'" The supplement turned out to contain a synthetic steroid, which cost
Gunter his scholarship, he claimed in a lawsuit that was settled before the trial
date, according to public court documents. He's now 27 and living in Oakland,
Calif. His health is much improved and he is working for a charitable
organization and playing baseball in his hometown league.
Jareem Gunter
Photo: Robert Houser
Name
(also known as)
ACONITE
(aconiti tuber, aconitum,
radix aconiti)
Purported uses
Possible dangers
Comments
Toxicity, nausea,
vomiting, low blood
pressure, respiratorysystem paralysis, heartrhythm disorders, death.
BITTER ORANGE
(aurantii fructus, Citrus
aurantium, zhi shi)
Fainting, heart-rhythm
disorders, heart attack,
stroke, death.
CHAPARRAL
(creosote bush, Larrea
divaricata, larreastat)
COLLOIDAL SILVER
(ionic silver, native
silver, Silver in
suspending agent)
syndrome, HIV/AIDS.
COLTSFOOT
(coughwort, farfarae
folium leaf, foalswort)
COMFREY
(blackwort, common
comfrey, slippery root)
Likely unsafe.
COUNTRY MALLOW
(heartleaf, Sida
cordifolia, silky white
mallow)
Nasal congestion,
allergies, asthma, weight
loss, bronchitis.
GERMANIUM
(Ge, Ge-132,
germanium-132)
Pain, infections,
glaucoma, liver problems,
arthritis, osteoporosis,
heart disease, HIV/AIDS,
cancer.
GREATER
CELANDINE
(celandine, chelidonii
herba, Chelidonium
majus)
Liver damage.
Possibly unsafe.
KAVA
(awa, Piper
methysticum, kavakava)
Anxiety (possibly
effective).
Liver damage.
LOBELIA
(asthma weed, Lobelia
inflata, pukeweed, vomit
wort)
Coughing, bronchitis,
asthma, smoking
cessation (possibly
ineffective).
YOHIMBE
(yohimbine, Corynanthe
yohimbi, Corynanthe
johimbi)
Clarification:
Source: Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, Professional Version, June 2010
11 supplements to consider
These popular supplements, listed in alphabetical order, have been shown to likely be safe for most people and possibly or likely to
be effective in appropriate doses for certain conditions. Talk to your doctor or pharmacist before starting any supplement. Most
supplements haven't been studied in pregnant or nursing women. The list of interactions and side effects is not all-inclusive.
Name
(also known as)
Selected potential
side effects
CALCIUM
(calcium carbonate,
calcium citrate,
calcium gluconate)
Likely effective in
combination with vitamin
D in preventing and
treating bone loss and
Belching, gas.
FISH OIL
(EPA/DHA, omega3 fatty acids, PUFA)
GLUCOSAMINE
SULFATE
(G6S, glucosamine
sulfate 2KCl,
glucosamine sulfatepotassium chloride)
Nausea, heartburn,
diarrhea, constipation,
headache.
LACTASE
(beta-galactosidase)
None known.
LACTOBACILLUS
(acidophilus,
acidophilus
lactobacillus,
probiotics)
PSYLLIUM
(blond plantago,
blonde psyllium,
plantago, isabgola)
PYGEUM
(African plum tree,
African prune,
Prunus africana)
None known.
SAMe
(ademetionine,
adenosylmethionine,
S-Adenosyl-LMethionine, sammy)
GI symptoms, dry
mouth, headache, mild
insomnia, anorexia,
sweating, dizziness, and
nervousness, especially
at higher doses. It can
make some people with
depression feel anxious.
(Hypericum
perforatum, Saynt
Johannes Wort,
SJW)
VITAMIN D
(Cholecalciferol,
vitamin D3,
ergocalciferol,
vitamin D2)
improving symptoms of
some forms of depression.
anxiety, dizziness,
headache, skin rash, and
tingling. It can cause skin
to become extra-sensitive
to the sun.
Clarification:
Source: Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, Professional Version, June 2010