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FDA issues warning about sexual enhancement drinks

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The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday advised consumers not to buy or use two drinks sold as supplements for sexual enhancement.

The products, Rock Hard Extreme and Passion Coffee, are sold on websites and possibly in retail outlets, the agency said. Laboratory analysis indicated that both contain sulfoaildenafil, an active pharmaceutical ingredient that is similar to sildenafil, the active ingredient in Viagra.

Sulfoaildenafil could interact with prescription medications that include nitrates, the FDA warned, lowering blood pressure to “dangerous levels.” Nitrate-containing drugs are often prescribed for men with diabetes, high blood pressure or heart disease.

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The warning arrives two weeks after a Dec. 15 letter to dietary supplement manufacturers in which the FDA said it would crack down on illegal supplements.

“We want consumers to be aware that there are products masquerading as dietary supplements that pose significant dangers,” FDA Principal Deputy Commissioner Joshua Sharfstein said at the time.

Sharfstein told reporters that the FDA was concerned primarily with three types of supplements. One class is weight-loss products with active ingredients such as sibutramine, found in the drug Meridia, which was recently withdrawn from the market because of increased risk of heart attack and stroke.

The other two are body-building products that contain anabolic steroids or “steroid analogs,” which can cause liver injury and increase the risk for heart attack, stroke and death; and sexual enhancement products such as Rock Hard Extreme and Passion Coffee.

Sharfstein said the products were poorly labeled, so consumers did not know what they were really buying.

Lawful dietary supplements, according to the FDA, are intended only as “an addition to a standard diet.”

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“If you have a drug product in it, it’s not a supplement,” said Judy Blatman, a spokeswoman for the Council for Responsible Nutrition, an industry trade organization. “We’re extremely supportive of the FDA’s actions to warn consumers about products that are masquerading as supplements.... They’re illegal.”

Blatman said her organization would like the FDA to get even more aggressive. “We’re hoping this will put a chill on companies who are doing this,” she said.

In an e-mail to The Times, FDA spokeswoman Siobhan DeLancey said that the agency had found nearly 300 such “tainted products” among dietary supplements it has examined. She did not specify how many of those were sexual enhancement products.

DeLancey also said that the FDA had received reports of fatalities among people using illegal sexual enhancement products.

The FDA advised consumers to stop using Rock Hard Extreme and Passion Coffee immediately and to throw them away. It encouraged people who had experienced side effects from either drink to notify their doctors.

eryn.brown@latimes.com

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