2021
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26226903
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Adulteration of Weight Loss Supplements by the Illegal Addition of Synthetic Pharmaceuticals

Abstract: Weight loss supplements that have illegal additives of pharmaceutical drugs or analogues have additional health risks, and customers may not be aware of what they are taking. This research is an essential investigation and quantification of illegally added pharmaceuticals or prescription medications, specifically fluoxetine, phenolphthalein, and sibutramine, in herbal weight loss supplements offered for sale in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). In this case, 137 weight loss supplements were collected and analyze… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Liquid chromatography coupled with the highresolution mass spectrometry screening of 124 forbidden substances belonging to 13 classes of pharmaceuticals applied to 110 food supplements collected from the internet market or during official controls in Italy revealed that 4.5% were non-compliant [24]. Highperformance liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry applied on weight loss supplements offered for sale in the United Arab Emirates revealed that 15.3% of the samples contained sibutramine, 13.9% contained phenolphthalein, and 5.1% contained fluoxetine [25].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Liquid chromatography coupled with the highresolution mass spectrometry screening of 124 forbidden substances belonging to 13 classes of pharmaceuticals applied to 110 food supplements collected from the internet market or during official controls in Italy revealed that 4.5% were non-compliant [24]. Highperformance liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry applied on weight loss supplements offered for sale in the United Arab Emirates revealed that 15.3% of the samples contained sibutramine, 13.9% contained phenolphthalein, and 5.1% contained fluoxetine [25].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2019 Rapid detection of adulteration of dehydroepiandrosterone in slimming products by competitive indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and lateral flow immunochromatography [ 832 ]; screening method for detection of illegal adulterants in ginseng pills by profiling analysis of HPLC multi-dimensional fingerprints [ 833 ]; 2020 identification of tert-butyl-4-anilinopiperidine-1-carboxylate (4-anilinopiperdine-t-BOC or 4-AP-t-BOC) in seized falsified ‘Xanax’ tablets and suspected heroin seizures [ 834 ]; 20 herbal mixtures containing Cumyl-PEGACLONE were quantitatively analyzed by HPLC-DAD after an initial screening by gas chromatography mass spectrometry [ 835 ]; simultaneous and reliable determination of 20 pharmaceutical compounds in adulterated health food products using liquid chromatography with electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS/MS) and liquid chromatography with quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC-QTOF-MS) [ 836 ]; MALDI-MS method for analysis of illegal drugs and doped substances added in supplements [ 837 ]; 2021 voltammetric method for analyzing weight loss products adulterated amphetamine [ 838 ]; development and validation of an HPLC-MS/MS system for the analysis of 16 chemical drugs illegally added to dietary supplements for weight-loss in a capsule form [ 839 ]; quantification of pharmaceuticals or prescription medications (fluoxetine, phenolphthalein, and sibutramine illegally added to herbal weight loss supplements by RP-HPLC-MS/MS [ 840 ]; IMS qualitiative screening method for illicit additives (ibuprofen, nitrazepam, nitrendipine, indomethacin, phenobarbital, sibutramine, diclofenac sodium, diazepam, estazolam, melatonin, phenolphthalein, prednisone acetate, betamethasone, metformin HCl, glibenclamide, and tadalafil) in herbal pharmaceuticals and health foods with quantification by HPLC [ 841 ]; UPLC-PDA and LC/EIS-MS/MS methods for simultaneously screening for 25 anti-hyperlipidemic substances illegally added to dietary supplements [ 842 ]; HPLC-DAD method for the identification and quantification of sexual stimulants and anabolic steroids in the adulterated dietary supplements [ 843 ]; MALDI-MS method for the analysis of illegally added and doped substances added to medicines or food [ 837 ]; 2022 mixed-mode sorbent for SPE of hydrophobic and hydrophilic illegal additives from food sample followed by analysis by RPLC/HILIC-MS/MS [ 844 ]; analytical techniques and metrological principles in studying dietary supplement products and ingredients, particularly medicinal plants and other botanicals [ 845 ]; a membrane-protected micro-SPE method based on molecular imprinting and its application to the determination of local anesthetics illegally added to cosmetics [ 846 ]; application of predicted fragmentation pathways and fragment ion structures with LC-QTOF-MS for the analysis of 15 steroids and 20 selective androgen receptor modulators in dietary supplements [ 847 ]; development of an atmospheric pressure solids analysis probe coupled with single-quadrupole mass spectrometer (A...…”
Section: Instrument Focusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The literature review conducted by the experts in this consensus led them to conclude that there is insufficient evidence to support the use of natural products to treat patients with obesity (LE: C; R: IIb). [118][119][120][121][122][123][124][125][126][127][128][129] These are some examples:…”
Section: Contraindicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Encouraging the use of natural or nutritional supplements to support weight loss is a widespread practice in Latin American countries, either because the patient decides to use them or through medical or paramedical recommendations. The literature review conducted by the experts in this consensus led them to conclude that there is insufficient evidence to support the use of natural products to treat patients with obesity (LE: C; R: IIb) 118–129 . These are some examples: chromium picolinate; Indian nut; Garcinia cambogia; Spirulina; and white kidney bean extract. …”
Section: Consensus Statementmentioning
confidence: 99%