User Login
Home


Now for some controversy. A researcher named Jason Lazarou, in the April 15, 1998, issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, describes Adverse Drug Reactions (ADR). He emphasized that ADRs are all too frequent and, in fact, are between the fourth and sixth leading cause of death. Ironically, in hospitals the majority of ADR problems are "due to inadequate monitoring or therapies and doses." The numbers are frightening: "In 1994 in the United States, 106,000 hospitalized patients died from an ADR." So the challenge remains for the discerning clinician just how significant the risks of herbs such as Ma huang (ephedra) really are.

Studies show that Ma huang may indeed increase the heart rate of some volunteers who have normal blood pressure. But so does a sauna. All in all, Ma huang had variable effects on blood pressure. Interestingly, a random analysis of this traditional Chinese herb using gas chromatography failed to show any nasty synthetic isomers, such as synthetic Ephedra alkaloids.

We all became gun shy after the weight-loss drugs Redux (dexfenflu-ramine) and Pondimin (fenfluramine), part of the popular fen-phen combination, were unceremoniously removed from the market in 1997. Even so, there are a lot of entrepreneurs anxious to

Read more...

 
Discuss this item on the forums. (0 posts)