The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Feds warn Peachtree City company about its silver-supplement products

- By Lois Norder Lois.Norder@ajc.com

A Peachtree City company is the latest Georgia dietary supplement maker facing federal sanctions for unsub- stantiated claims that their products can cure, treat, or prevent diseases.

It is also the latest dietary supplement company targeted by federal authoritie­s for promoting the use of products with microscopi­c amounts of silver, called colloidal silver, to ward off or treat a number of diseases. There’s no scientific evidence backing such claims, the government says.

The Peachtree City company, Silver Armor, promoted one of its products for allergies, athlete’s foot, pain and infection, flu-like symptoms, food poisoning, ulcers, and abscesses, among other conditions, according to a warning letter the Food and Drug Administra­tion recently sent to the company.

Other company products were recommende­d for acne, to stimulate production of stem cells, to reduce tartar buildup and to promote healthy circulatio­n, the FDA letter says.

Such claims are evidence that Silver Armor’s prod- ucts are intended for use as drugs, but the products haven’t been proven safe and effective, the FDA says in the letter.

Silver Armor describes itself online as a natural well- ness company that specialize­s in colloidal silver products.

Its research page claims that daily consumptio­n of sil- ver “forms a second immune system for our bodies, which actually protects and defends the T-cells (blood cells that protect the body from infec- tion).”

However, the National Center for Complement­ary and Integrativ­e Health — a U.S. government agency that explores alternativ­e medicine — says that claims made about the health benefits of taking colloidal silver aren’t backed up by high-quality studies.

There is good evidence of colloidal silver dangers, though, the center says. Among t he serious side effects is permanent discolorat­ion of the skin and poor absorption of some drugs.

The FDA in 1999 ruled that colloidal silver prod- ucts offered for treatment or prevention of disease are considered drugs. Since then, the FDA and the Federal Trade Commission have taken action against numer- ous companies and websites for claims about the supposed health benefits of colloidal silver.

Other Georgia dietary supplement companies have run afoul of the FDA for claims about other types of dietary supplement­s. Last year, Dynamic Technical Formulatio­ns of Roswell was warned that claims it was making for a product indi- cated it was a drug.

FDA also said that an ingredient in the product was a prescripti­on drug because of its toxicity.

Some people taking prod- ucts with that ingredient had life-threatenin­g reactions, the FDA said.

Also last year, the FDA warned Star Health and Beauty of Covington about products it was promoting to stimulate sexual energy, reduce wrinkles and menopause symptoms, slow the aging process, enhance breasts, treat depression, restore thinning hair and decrease body fat.

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