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Ephedra on CBS tonight

ItalianSta

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http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/08/13/eveningnews/main518563.shtml


(CBS/AP)



Also called "Ma huang", ephedra is banned by the Olympics committee, the NFL and the NCAA. The U.S. military has recorded injuries and deaths in troops that took ephedra.



(CBS) At age 35 Capt. Michael McDonald was an up-and-coming Army pilot, and as far as anyone knew, the picture of health.

But, as CBS News Correspondent Sharyl Attkisson reports, three years ago McDonald's military career came to a sudden halt. During physical training he collapsed. His heart stopped and rescuers shocked him back to life.

"I woke up in a hospital," he says.

He didn't even recognize his own wife.

"We laughed because he tapped his mother over his shoulder and said, 'Who's that pretty girl over there?' " his wife Margaret remembers.

Today, he can't recall his own wedding day, and sometimes can't remember from one minute to the next. McDonald's collapse mystified doctors, but they soon honed in on one factor.

"The only thing he was really taking was Ripped Fuel," says Margaret.

McDonald is now suing the makers of Ripped Fuel, one of dozens of dietary supplements containing the herb ephedra, a chemical cousin to speed. It's used to boost energy, build muscle or lose weight. Because it's all-natural, McDonald thought it was safe. But a growing chorus of critics claims ephedra is not safe.

Also called "Ma huang", ephedra is banned by the Olympics committee, the NFL and the NCAA. The U.S. military has recorded injuries and deaths in troops that took ephedra.

Yet it remains wildly popular. The industry brags three billion servings are consumed every year.

That frustrates Raymond Woosley, a pharmacologist hired by the FDA in 1995 to analyze a rash of deaths and heart problems in teenagers who'd taken ephedra.

"There's no doubt in my mind that these we're being caused by the ephedra products," Woosley says.

After reporting his findings to the FDA, Woosley thought the agency would move quickly to restrict ephedra. But that didn't happen.

Part of the problem is that herbal supplements are officially classified as a food and not a drug - meaning they don't have to be proven safe or screened by the FDA before they're put on the market. And the proof required to force them off the market is much higher than what's necessary to ban a dangerous drug.

The ephedra industry says its own scientific studies show the herb is completely safe.

"Consumers should understand that if there were any science indicating that the products were doing what some of the critics claim they're doing, that the industry would pull these products off the market in a heartbeat," says Wes Siegner, of the Ephedra Education Council.

In 2000, the FDA again tapped Woosley to review 135 more cases, this time mostly young women and athletes.

"We saw the same thing," he says. "People were dying. People were having heart attacks, strokes that (they) shouldn't have."

Despite the second analysis, the FDA failed to act, in part, Woosley says, under pressure from the powerful ephedra industry. Now, the watchdog group Public Citizen is demanding the FDA ban ephedra. The FDA has put off a decision until at least fall 2002.

No matter what the outcome, McDonald blames ephedra for grounding him from the career he's dreamed of since he was a kid.

McDonald says he will never fly again in the military.

"My military career was cut short," he says.

Ironically cut short, he believes, by an herbal supplement he thought would give him an edge.
 
it seems to me that most of the cases of people dying from the ephedra are caused from high dosage...if people didn't over due it, then i'm sure deaths from this would be significantly lower, but of course there's always that % that could drop dead the first time they take it, all this shit is a gamble anyway..moderation people!!!!
 
This media exposure is getting out of hand. The media needs to do a story on all of the people that have successfully been treated with AAS and HGH therapy. I am sure that there are thousands of people out there with good things to day about AAS and HGH. Why doesn't the media do a story on how HGH may be the answer to treating obesity? Ridiculous. Everybody know that aspirin and penicillin can kill if used improperly--not to mention narcotics, amphetamines, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, etc. It's the bad stories that keep the obese just that: obese. They are afraid to try anything other than high calorie, high carb diets; bullshit exercise routines; and junk from GNC--which just keeps getting banned. I have espounded on this issue before and I'll keep at it.
 
This has gotten out of hand. These people getting hurt by using ephedrine are abusing it. I can tell you right now the people in the military getting hurt from it use it like tic tacs. They sleep very little so they use them for a quck pick me up and I am sure that all of these people are taking twice or perhaps more of the recomended dose. College football players that use the stuff pop the things in ridiculous amounts before games because it makes them crazy and I am sure some guys do it before practices as well. In highschool guys on my football team would take a bit of ephedrine along with the red bulls and some other illegal drugs to get crazy before games and it really fucked them up. Will the media tell us about all the people getting hurt by ephedrine?Yes. Will they also tell us the amounts these people were taking in? No. Fuck our media that's all I have to say and I wish they would fucking quit being morons.:mad:
 
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