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American Teenager Overdoses on Caffeine Powder - FDA to Consider Regulatory Action

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Administrator. Graeme
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A few weeks before their prom king's death, students at an Ohio high school had attended an assembly on narcotics that warned about the dangers of heroin and prescription painkillers.
But it was one of the world's most widely accepted drugs that killed Logan Stiner a powdered form of caffeine so potent that as little as a single teaspoon can be fatal.
The teen's sudden death in May has focused attention on the unregulated powder and drawn a warning from federal health authorities urging consumers to avoid it.
"I don't think any of us really knew that this stuff was out there," Jay Arbaugh, superintendent of the Keystone Local Schools.
The federal Food and Drug Administration said Friday that it's investigating caffeine powder and will consider taking regulatory action. The agency cautioned parents that young people could be drawn to it.
An autopsy found that Stiner had a lethal amount of caffeine in his system when he died May 27 at his home in LaGrange, Ohio, southwest of Cleveland.
Stiner, a wrestler, had more than 70 micrograms of caffeine per milliliter of blood in his system, as much as 23 times the amount found in a typical coffee or soda drinker, according to the county coroner.
His mother has said she was unaware her son took caffeine powder. He was just days away from graduation and had planned to study at the University of Toledo.
Caffeine powder is sold as a dietary supplement, so it's not subject to the same federal regulations as certain caffeinated foods. Users add it to drinks for a pick-me-up before workouts or to control weight gain.
[h=3]A minuscule amount packs a punch[/h]
A mere 1/16th of a teaspoon can contain about 200 milligrams of caffeine, roughly the equivalent of two large cups of coffee. That means a heaping teaspoon could kill, said Dr. Robert Glatter, an emergency physician at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York.

The powder is almost impossible to measure with common kitchen tools, the FDA said.
"The difference between a safe amount and a lethal dose of caffeine in these powdered products is very small," FDA spokeswoman Jennifer Dooren said.
Glatter said he's seen several younger patients experience complications from caffeine in the last few months. Some arrive with rapid heart rates.
"They're starting to latch onto the powders more because they see it as a more potent way to lose weight," Glatter said.
Health officials worry about caffeine powder's potential popularity among exercise enthusiasts and young people seeking an energy boost.
Dr. Henry Spiller directs a poison control center at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. Over a week or so this month, the center took reports of three people hospitalized for misusing caffeine powder.
"I can't believe you can buy this," Spiller said. "Honestly, I mean, it's frightening. It makes no sense to me."
Federal investigations have recently prompted some companies to pull products with added caffeine.
Last year, Wrigley halted sales and marketing of Alert caffeinated gum after discussions with the FDA. In 2010, the agency forced manufacturers of alcoholic caffeinated beverages to cease production of those drinks.


[h=3]Authorities pledge action[/h]Authorities have also pledged to take action if they are able to link deaths to consumption of energy drinks. Hospitalizations from those drinks have been on the rise.
The number of emergency department visits involving energy drinks doubled from 10,068 visits in 2007 to 20,783 visits in 2011, according to the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Most of the cases involved teens or young adults.
A full teaspoon of caffeine powder could contain 3,200 milligrams of caffeine.
In that concentrated amount, a person can experience adverse effects in a matter of minutes, said Dr. Bob Hoffman, a New York University medical toxicologist.
The brain becomes alert, then agitated and confused. The heartbeat picks up and can become dangerously irregular. A person can suffer nausea, vomiting and potentially a seizure.
"The thing about caffeine is just because you see it every day, just because it's naturally occurring it comes from a plant doesn't mean that it's safe," Hoffman said.
Back in Ohio, the superintendent of the district where Stiner attended school plans to take steps of his own. He wants to add the dangers of caffeine powder to drug and alcohol awareness programs.
- AP

Teen's death puts focus on caffeine powder dangers - Health & Wellbeing - NZ Herald News
 
Yeah, and funny how by that same token it has taken govt. ages to start cutting out smoking! More $$ in fags than caffeine I guess ;)
 
Yeah, and funny how by that same token it has taken govt. ages to start cutting out smoking! More $$ in fags than caffeine I guess ;)
when did the gov start cutting out smoking? all I have seen them do is raise the taxes

but yet stuff like dmaa was banned in only a matter of weeks , other supplements are banned left right and centre
 
when did the gov start cutting out smoking? all I have seen them do is raise the taxes

but yet stuff like dmaa was banned in only a matter of weeks , other supplements are banned left right and centre

Dats what I mean... the health effects from smoking and they've only just started getting pro-active about stomping it out. I reckon the taxes they were getting from it were far too great a revenue stream to stomp out in the old days when everyone was doing it.

It's only now when it's no longer 'as cool' to smoke and that smokers are less and less that they are starting to vilify them and make it harder for people to do it in public.

I don't agree with it, but both my parents were smokers and I kinda feel sorry for the kunce being ostracised now. If you wanna kill yourself, so be it, who am I to judge.

Must admit its great to be able to go to a bar/club these days and come home without smelling like a tobacco factory. Your hair/clothes and skins just got covered in it.
 
All it takes is for one moron to ruin it for everyone else....

So true. Natural Selection, you can die from anything if your stupid enough. *guy falls off ladder and dies* BAN LADDERS. *chick eats 200 lemons a day and dies* BAN LEMONS. *small child swallows porcelain fragments and dies* BAN PORCELAIN. *Drunk man trips over grass tuft and hits head on cement footpath and dies from head injuries* BAN GRASS AND CEMENT FOOTPATHS
 
When I was still in my teens I was sometimes taking 10 no doz tabs before training - I was strung out like a crack whore on heat
 
So true. Natural Selection, you can die from anything if your stupid enough. *guy falls off ladder and dies* BAN LADDERS. *chick eats 200 lemons a day and dies* BAN LEMONS. *small child swallows porcelain fragments and dies* BAN PORCELAIN. *Drunk man trips over grass tuft and hits head on cement footpath and dies from head injuries* BAN GRASS AND CEMENT FOOTPATHS

Natural selection is not quick enough. And people need to stop rooting stupid people
 
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