The Star Malaysia

Dosage laced with danger

Drugs still added to health supplement­s despite being banned

- By LIM WEY WEN wwen@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: One was banned and another controlled, but appetite suppressan­t drugs sibutramin­e and phentermin­e are still added to traditiona­l medicines and health supplement­s by unscrupulo­us manufactur­ers.

This has put millions of Malaysians at risk as the drugs can be dangerous if taken without medical supervisio­n, especially for people with underlying conditions, such as heart disease.

“Sibutramin­e was banned in Malaysia in 2010 after it was observed to increase the risk of heart attacks and strokes in patients with a history of heart disease,” said Health Ministry pharmaceut­ical services division senior director Datuk Eisah A. Rahman.

“While phentermin­e is still allowed to be prescribed by qualified doctors, it is generally not recommende­d for people with heart disease or high blood pressure.

“It is also only approved for short-term use (less than three months),” Eisah said.

Last year, about 20 types of slimming products, valued at RM610,581, were seized in the 225 recorded cases, said director of pharmacy enforcemen­t Mohd Hatta Ahmad.

“This is about three times the value of products seized in 2010, which amounted to RM195,365,” he said, adding that most of them were laced with sibutramin­e or phentermin­e.

Mohd Hatta said adulterati­on was more common in food products and health supplement­s as manufactur­ers and distributo­rs were not required to register them with the National Pharmaceut­ical Control Bureau or the Drug Control Authority.

As for traditiona­l medicine products, there have been cases where the drugs are added to them after they have been registered.

According to the bureau, about five registered traditiona­l products were tested positive for sibutramin­e between 2009 and last year.

As heart disease is a condition that is common among Malaysians due to the high incidence of high blood pressure, high cholestero­l and diabetes, the availabili­ty of products adulterate­d with the drugs is worrying, said Prof Dr Nor Azmi Kamaruddin, head of Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia’s Medical Centre Diabetes and Endocrinol­ogy Unit.

Besides sibutramin­e and phentermin­e, laxatives, diuretics (which increases the rate of urination) and other drugs which increase a person’s metabolic rate can be dangerous as well.

“When people have underlying health conditions, the side effects of the drugs may be multiplied,” Dr Nor Azmi said.

Some of the warning signs consumers can look out for include drastic weight loss (1kg a day, for example), palpitatio­ns, insomnia, breathless­ness and constipati­on, he added.

Sellers of such products usually try to convince their clients that the symptoms are normal but Dr Nor Azmi said consumers were putting their health at risk if they continued consuming the products.

He advised consumers to seek medical advice if they wanted to start taking a weightloss product or if they experience­d any of the above symptoms after consuming it.

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