Lawsuit Claims Weight Loss & Sports Supplements Have Unsafe Ingredient
1. Lawsuit Claims Weight Loss & Sports Supplements Have
Unsafe Ingredient
Story comes courtesy of California Watch.
By Bernice Yeung
A substance originally created as an over-the-counter http://golfandcou.vs114.snowflakehosting.ch/
decongestant has been illegally and unsafely sold in widely marketed sports supplements, according
to a class-action lawsuit filed this month in Los Angeles federal court.
The compound, 1,3-dimethylamylamine, also known as DMAA, is "illegal and dangerous," court
filings said. The lawsuit also claimed that "experts in the industry have become concerned that this
potent stimulant drug will lead to serious health issues and even death."
The suit was filed by Lynette Bates, a Southern California woman who last summer bought a pre-
exercise drink powder called C4 Extreme, which promises "explosive workouts."
Bates sued retailer GNC and Cellucor Sports Nutrition, which manufactures, distributes and markets
the supplement, for "making false and unsubstantiated representations concerning the efficacy,
safety and legality of C4 Extreme," among other claims. Cellucor's parent company, Woodbolt
International, is also named in search engines the suit.
C4 Extreme is no longer manufactured with DMAA. But the substance can still be found in a variety
of dietary supplements aimed at boosting physical performance or weight loss, such as Jack3d
(pronounced "jacked") and OxyELITE Pro, which are sold online and at retail stores.
Advertised as "legal cocaine" on some websites, the powder is also sold in packets or pill form.
Medical experts say there are potential health risks from consuming DMAA.
"What we've seen is that DMAA in supplements has been connected to situations where the heart
has gone suddenly into failure due to excessive stress," said Dr. Pieter Cohen, an assistant professor
at Harvard Medical School.
Cohen added that when DMAA is taken as a party drug with alcohol, it has been connected to
bleeding in the brain.
GNC declined to comment on the pending litigation, but in an e-mailed statement provided to
California Watch, corporate spokesman Greg Miller said that "despite the media hype surrounding
DMAA, GNC is unaware of any scientific or medical evidence which calls the safety of DMAA into
question. To the contrary, GNC is aware of a number of published, peer-reviewed studies that show
that DMAA is perfectly safe when taken as directed."
Supplements containing DMAA remain "a popular product segment," Miller said.
Cellucor, Woodbolt International and attorneys representing Bates did not respond to requests for
comment.
DMAA was developed as a synthetic substance by drugmaker Eli Lilly in the 1940s, and it was
2. approved by the Food and Drug Administration as a nasal decongestant spray. It was marketed as
Forthane, and ads trumpeted that patients found it both "desirable" and "inconspicuous." The patent
lapsed in the 1970s, and about six years ago, manufacturers began adding DMAA in powder form to
sports and dietary supplements as Geranamine, a geranium oil derivative.
The entrepreneur credited with this discovery is Patrick Arnold, the organic chemist who created the
designer steroid drugs behind the BALCO baseball doping scandal. Arnold, who served prison time
for his role in the BALCO case, now runs dietary supplement companies such as E-pharm Nutrition,
which sells products like spiced apple-flavored Clearshot, an energy drink with "powerful neuro-
stimulating and endurance-enhancing properties" that contains DMAA. He did not respond to
requests for comment.
Since its addition to dietary and sports supplements, DMAA has become the subject of controversy.
It has been banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency and is a controlled substance in Canada and
New Zealand.
The powder is also the subject of a safety review by the U.S. Army; two soldiers died after having
heart attacks during fitness training last year, and DMAA was found in their toxicology reports. In
December, the military stopped selling sports supplements containing the substance in military
exchange stores, pending the review.
An Army spokesman said the armed forces don't currently have a position on the safety of DMAA,
but the "taking down of the products from shelves speaks to the need to take interim precautionary
measures," Jaime Cavazos, a senior public affairs supervisor, wrote in an e-mail.
Because manufacturers and distributors say DMAA is an organic compound derived from geranium
oil - which has long been used in food and fragrances - it did not require FDA review before it was
added to dietary supplements.
3. The claim that DMAA is a natural ingredient is
being challenged in the class-action lawsuit as an
act of false and deceptive marketing, and some
parties unrelated to the lawsuit agree it isn't
organic.
"I have been testing DMAA for several years, and
of the material that I've tested, everything so far
has been synthetic," said James Neal-Kababick,
who conducts forensic testing for natural
products companies as the director of Flora
Research Laboratories in Oregon. "I don't believe
there is a natural source for this. The majority of
expert scientists agree that this a drug, and it
was and always has been a drug."
Frank Lampe, spokesman for the American
Herbal Products Association, said that "to avoid
any confusion," the organization issued a trade
requirement that went into effect in January that
states that DMAA should not be labeled "as
geranium oil or as any part of the geranium
plant."
Manufacturers primarily have relied on a 1996
paper published in a Chinese scientific journal that links DMAA to geranium oil, though critics, like
Neal-Kababick, say the paper is fraught with scientific errors, including translation problems.
Harvard's Cohen said the fact that DMAA remains in products on store shelves illustrates the need
for increased oversight of dietary and sports supplements by the FDA, which is considering making
adjustments to guidelines on new dietary supplement ingredients.
In a recent article published in the New England Journal of Medicine, Cohen argued that there are
"fundamental flaws" to the current regulatory framework for dietary supplements, and as a result,
"the purple dye in Jell-O requires much more evidence of safety than ingredients used in
supplements."
Tamara Ward, an FDA spokeswoman, would not comment on DMAA. In an e-mailed statement, she
said: "As a matter of policy, FDA does not comment on the safety, label or labeling, or claims made
for products with parties other than the responsible firm during the course of any investigation for
regulation action. As with any complaint or concern we receive about FDA-regulated products, we
will consider whether a violation of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act has occurred and, if
so, whether regulatory action is warranted in light
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sport of FDA's enforcement priorities and resources."
Ward declined to confirm whether there is an ongoing investigation or review of DMAA.
Bernice Yeung is an investigative reporter for California Watch, a project of the non-profit Center for
Investigative Reporting. Find more California Watch stories here.