Tuesday, July 10, 2012

ABOUT HERBALIFE ANALYSIS REPORT


Watch videos about liver disease

The USDA has failed to safeguard the meat supply from drug residues and toxic metals, which may result in jaundice and other liver issues. The discovery of infectious hepatitis E virus in retail pork products may help explain the purported association between liver failure and pork consumption. The transfer of blood on cutting machines may explain hepatitis C transmission between deli workers. Potentially toxic to the liver: noni juice, Herbalife® supplements (see here, here), spirulina (see here, here), cod liver oil, BPA in plastics, JuicePlus+® supplements, and shark cartilage.
The good news is that a vegetable protein diet appears to treat liver failure. Indian gooseberries may also protect the liver. And Ceylon cinnamon is the safest because it does not contain coumarin, which may damage the liver at toxic doses. Lastly, chamomile tea may not be safe to consume if you have a liver disease.
Dr. Greger covers liver disease in his full-length presentation, Uprooting the Leading Causes of Death, where he explores the role diet may play in preventing, treating, and even reversing our top 15 killers.
Topic summary contributed by Denise
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Herbalife® Supplement Liver Toxicity




The liver toxicity associated with Herbalife® supplements may be due to vitamin A toxicity



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The C.A.M. Report 
Complementary and Alternative Medicine: 
Fair, Balanced, and to the Point

Liver toxicity associated with Herbalife dietary supplements

Researchers from the University Hospital of Bern in Switzerland report 10 cases of hepatotoxicity.
First, the details.
  • A questionnaire was sent to all public Swiss hospitals.
  • Cases covering the years 1998 to 2004 were evaluated to determine a causative role of the products.
And, the results.
  • Herbalife dietary supplements were implicated in 12 cases of toxic hepatitis — 10 cases warranted further assessment.
  • The time from starting treatment to onset of liver toxicity was 5 months (range 0.5-144).
  • Liver biopsy in 7 cases showed hepatic necrosis (liver cell death).
  • There was marked lymphocytic/eosinophilic (white blood cell) infiltration and cholestasis (blocked bile flow) in 5 patients.
  • One patient with fulminant (severe) liver failure got a liver transplant.
The likelihood of an Herbalife product causing the liver toxicity was classified as certain in 2, probable in 7 and possible in 1 case(s). All patients recovered within weeks after Herbalife products were discontinued, with the exception of the patient who underwent liver transplantation and a patient who developed cirrhosis.
The bottom line?
Herbalife International is a company that sells weight-loss, nutrition and skin-care products. The abstract does not specify which ones.

The authors’ abstract from Digestive Diseases Week meeting in 2006 concludes, this is the first case series of toxic hepatitis implicating Herbalife products.
  • Mostly immuno-allergic mechanisms appear to be responsible.
  • Liver toxicity may be severe, causing fulminant hepatic failure and veno-occlusive (blockage) liver disease.
  • A high degree of suspicion and appropriate history taking is mandatory to reveal the potential for hepatotoxicity of “innocuous” dietary supplements.
  • Also, better declaration of components and a more active role of regulatory agencies in surveillance of such products would be desirable.
9/4/07 22:23 JR
This entry was posted on Tuesday, September 4th, 2007 at 11:07 PM  

  The C.A.M. Report  

Niteworks increases anaerobic threshold in elderly men

Researchers at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, in Los Angeles, California, studied the effects of arginine + antioxidants on exercise performance in older people.
First, the details.
  • 16 elderly male cyclists were randomly assigned to a treatment group for 3 weeks.
    • A proprietary supplement (Niteworks, Herbalife International Inc.)
    • A placebo powder
  • Exercise parameters were assessed by maximal incremental exercise testing performed on a stationary cycle ergometer using breath-by-breath analysis at the start and weeks 1 and 3.
  • Neither the patients nor researchers knew the treatment given — double blind.
And, the results.
  • In the Niteworks group, anaerobic threshold significantly increased 17% at week 1, and the effect was significantly sustained by week 3.
  • In the placebo group, there was no change in anaerobic threshold.
  • The anaerobic threshold for the Niteworks group was significantly higher vs placebo at week 1 and week 3.
  • There were no significant changes in VO2 max (a measure of aerobic capacity) between placebo and Niteworks groups at either week 1 or 3 when compared to the start of the study.
  • There were no side effects in either group.
The bottom line?
The authors concluded, “An arginine and antioxidant-containing supplement increased the anaerobic threshold at both week one and week three in elderly cyclists. No effect on VO2 max was observed. This study indicated a potential role of L-arginine and antioxidant supplementation in improving exercise performance in elderly.”
It’s not stated in the study whether aside from positive changes in anaerobic threshold there were clinically meaningful benefits. Does a 17% change result in better quality of life, greater activities of daily living, etc.?
More background on arginine and exercise performance is here.
NOTE: The study, conducted at UCLA and funded by Herbalife, used Herbalife’s original formula Niteworks. The current product has a slightly different formula, although no changes were made to the active ingredients, according to the article published on Medical News Today.



The C.A.M. Report 
Complementary and Alternative Medicine: 
Fair, Balanced, and to the Point

Quality issues for some “natural” menopause products

ConsumerLab.com has reported the results of quality control tests on black cohosh supplements, soy and red clover isoflavone supplements, and progesterone creams.
Among the products tested, quality was inconsistent according to an article on HealthNewsDigest.com.
Quality problems
  • 1 supplement provided 30% of the isoflavones on the label.
  • Another supplement provided 65% of the claimed amount of glycitein — an isoflavone in soy.
  • Lead contamination was detected in 1 supplement.
  • 2 products violated FDA labeling requirements by not specifying the plant parts used as ingredients.
Black cohosh
  • 6 supplements met quality standards.
Progesterone creams
  • 3 creams provide their listed amount of progesterone.
Brands tested included Balance, Herbalife, Kevala, Life-flo, LifeWise, Natrol, Natures Answer, Natures Bounty, Nature Made, NOW, Nutrilite, Oona, Puritan’s Pride, Rainbow Light, Swanson, TruNature (Costco), Vitamin Shoppe, Vitamin World, and Vitanica.
You’ll have to buy the report to learn more.

Review of liver injury associated with dietary supplements: Herbalife®, Hydroxycut products and others

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Review of liver injury associated with dietary supplements

Felix Stickel1, Kerstin Kessebohm2, Rosemarie Weimann3, Helmut K. Seitz4Article first published online: 11 JAN 2011


Liver International

Volume 31, Issue 5, pages 595–605,
May 2011

DOI: 10.1111/j.1478-3231.2010.02439.x


Dietary supplements (DS) are easily available and increasingly used, and adverse hepatic reactions have been reported following their intake. To critically review the literature on liver injury because of DSs, delineating patterns and mechanisms of injury and to increase the awareness towards this cause of acute and chronic liver damage. Studies and case reports on liver injury specifically because of DSs published between 1990 and 2010 were searched in the PubMed and EMBASE data bases using the terms ‘dietary/nutritional supplements’, ‘adverse hepatic reactions’, ‘liver injury’; ‘hepatitis’, ‘liver failure’, ‘vitamin A’ and ‘retinoids’, and reviewed for yet unidentified publications. Significant liver injury was reported after intake of Herbalife® and Hydroxycut products, tea extracts from Camellia sinensis, products containing usnic acid and high contents of vitamin A, anabolic steroids and others. No uniform pattern of hepatotoxicity has been identified and severity may range from asymptomatic elevations of serum liver enzymes to hepatic failure and death. Exact estimates on how frequent adverse hepatic reactions occur as a result of DSs cannot be provided. Liver injury from DSs mimicking other liver diseases is increasingly recognized. Measures to reduce risk include tighter regulation of their production and distribution and increased awareness of users and professionals of the potential risks.


Abbreviations

ALF, acute liver failure;
DILI, drug-induced liver injury;
DS, dietary supplements;
FDA, Food and Drug Administration;
HSC/MFB, hepatic stellate cells/portal myofibroblasts.
.

The use of dietary supplements (DS) containing vitamins, anti-oxidants, fibre, trace elements, proteins, amino acids and herbal constituents has become a major health trend in affluent societies (1, 2). Consumption of DS in the USA has doubled to 18.9% of adults admitting their use only between 1999 and 2004 (3, 4); some investigations report their consumption up to 47% in certain subgroups such as among elder, non-smoking females with higher education (5). The rising popularity of DS is probably because of an increased awareness of consumers towards health in general and the desire to prevent diseases by an optimized nutritional status, and the persuasion that these treatments are safe (1, 2, 5, 6). Further, DS do not require prescriptions from health professionals allowing largely unrestricted access to relatively cheap products. Consequently, marketing such products has become a multibillion business largely unregulated by official health authorities (6–8).

In the USA, DS are expected to meet the standards outlined in the Dietary Supplement and Health Education Act published in 1994, which allows distribution without prior approval of their efficacy and safety by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (9). This simplified licensing practice does not ensure efficacy and safety in the same strict way as with the approval of conventional medications and treatments. Similarly, the European Union has set forth legislative measures for the distribution and marketing of DS and functional foods that are outlined in the European Commission 2000 White Paper on Food Safety (10, 11). This set of legislation pays tribute to the fact that DS may harbour specific problems because of their complex composition, particularly with respect to quality aspects, and defines guidelines for conducting premarketing in vitro and in vivo studies.


While adverse hepatic reactions from xenobiotics are well documented by pre- and post-marketing pharmacovigilance, the situation for DS is less well depicted as widespread and uncontrolled use and under-reporting prevent the determination of their true incidence. Additionally, a low awareness of users and providers towards their potential harms impedes their recognition as the causative agent in incidents of hepatotoxicity. Consequently, estimates of the frequency of DS-associated hepatic injury are likely imprecise and, possibly, too low. The proportion of hepatotoxicity ascribed to DS varies from 2% in a Spanish study (12) describing 531 cases of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) to approximately 10% in a series from the US Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network (DILIN) (13). Figures were as high as 35% in a small series of 20 patients developing acute liver failure with DS exposure as the only identifiable cause of liver damage (14).


Our article aimed to review and describe the literature on liver injury because of DS, delineate patterns and mechanisms of injury and to increase the awareness towards this possible cause of acute and chronic liver damage.

 

Literature search methodology

In February 2010, case reports and series thereof on liver injury specifically occurring following the consumption of DS published between 1990 and 2010 were searched in PubMed and EMBASE data bases using the terms ‘adverse hepatic reactions’, ‘anabolic steroids’, ‘Camellia sinensis’, ‘dietary/nutritional supplements’, ‘Herbalife’, ‘hepatitis’, ‘Hydroxycut’, ‘green tea’, ‘liver failure’, ‘liver injury’, ‘Noni’, ‘retinoids’, ‘vitamin A’ and critically reviewed. Retrieved publications were searched for yet unidentified publications. Remedies were considered DS if consumed as an aid to improve nutritional status, to loose weight or to treat constipation. Cases of liver injury from preparations taken for other causes than nutritional purposes were not included. No language restriction was used.



While hepatotoxicity from herbal medicines in general has been addressed in several reviews (15–18), summaries specifically devoted to liver-related risks along with DS are scarce (19). In the following, a panel of rather distinct DS preparations associated with liver injury are described
(Table 1).


Herbalife® (Los Angeles, CA, USA) sells nutritional and herbal supplements as tablets, capsules, drinks and energy bars for weight control, improvement of nutrition, ‘well-being’ and cosmetics. In 2006, the stock market quoted that Herbalife® company had a revenue of US$3.1 billion via online marketing or through independently operating sales agents.


Specific dietary supplements associated with liver injury

There are so far six published reports on liver damage following the intake of Herbalife® products since 2007 describing 34 cases from five countries (Switzerland, Israel, Spain, Argentina and Iceland), although Herbalife® products are sold in at least 60 countries worldwide (20–25). Individual data of all reports are displayed in
Table 2. Pattern of injury was mostly hepatocellular, but mixed and cholestatic enzyme patterns were also observed. Severity ranged from mild to severe hepatic damage including cirrhosis and acute liver failure requiring liver transplantation, which was successful in one patient while the second died because of post-operative complications. Causality between intake of Herbalife® products and the evolution of liver injury was assessed by widely used scores (26, 27) in five of the six reports and considered ‘certain’ in at least five patients by a positive rechallenge reaction and ‘probable’ in the majority of the remaining cases (20, 21).

Since Herbalife®-related liver injury was first reported in 2005 in Switzerland (28) and Spain (29), some countries (Israel and Switzerland) have not noticed further incidents after publication of corresponding series, while other investigators continue to see new cases (G. Manso and M. Johnannsson, personal communication). However, Herbalife® representatives have so far denied the causal relationship between the consumption of their products and cases of liver injury (30).



It still remains entirely speculative what might have been the cause of liver damage in the published cases as patients took up to 17 different Herbalife® products at the same time, which makes it extremely difficult if not impossible to identify the crucial compound(s). Based on the observation of plasma cell infiltrates in some patients, Elinav et al. (20) hypothesized that immune-mediated liver injury could be a possible explanation in some cases. Moreover, speculations over possibly adulterated products evolved after a report on two patients of which one developed cirrhosis
(Fig. 1) demonstrated bacterial contamination of several Herbalife® products with Bacillus subtilis as a possible explanation of liver injury (24). Herbalife® runs numerous production sites worldwide that deliver products to different regions, suggesting that spoiled products contaminated with certain germs, chemicals such as softeners, preservatives, flavour enhancers, pesticides or heavy metals either intentionally added during the manufacturing process or accidentally contained in the unrefined raw products, i.e. herb extracts, could have been responsible for locally restricted series of hepatotoxicity.


Camellia sinensis (green tea)
Green tea is among the most frequently consumed drinks in the USA and often used as a DS. The first report on liver injury following the ingestion of green tea extracts and preparations thereof was published in 1999 (31), and since then, numerous consecutive cases were reported to regulatory agencies worldwide. With effect of April 2003, the manufacturer of Exolise® (Arkopharma, Carros, France), a hydro-alcoholic extract of C. sinensis, has revocated all of their products after altogether 13 cases of acute liver damage following its intake were reported to the French pharmacovigilance authorities (Agence Francaise de Securité Sanitaire de Produits de Sanité; http://www.afssaps.sante.fr). As a reaction to these accumulating reports, the US Pharmacopeia performed a systematic review of all cases accessible from PubMed, EMBASE and pharmacovigilance data bases in the USA, Canada, UK and Australia reporting on 34 single cases of liver injury following the ingestion of numerous different green tea preparations (32). Herein, case reports were retrospectively evaluated according to the Naranjo causality algorithm scale (33), and 27 reports pertaining to liver damage were labelled as ‘possibly’ and the remaining seven cases as ‘probably’ linked to green tea. Another Medline search review of cases on green tea liver injury from the same year also retrieved 34 published reports and described two further yet unpublished cases (34). On histological examination, livers of patients revealed inflammatory reactions, cholestasis, occasionally steatosis and necrosis. Although there was some overlap of single reports between these two review articles, collected case reports were not identical and jointly provided details on 58 cases of hepatotoxicity along with the intake of green tea extracts, powdered leaves, green tea infusions and hydro-alcoholic and aqueous extracts. In Mazzanti's summary, no causality re-evaluation was performed, but information on de- and rechallenge is provided for every case indicating a positive rechallenge response with accelerated recurrence of liver injury in seven of 36 incidents, which strongly suggests a causal relationship between the observed liver injury and green tea consumption. Of concern is that there was one reported death. However, a note of caution is warranted in many of the cases regarding an exclusive assignment of causality to green tea, because many patients who experienced adverse hepatic reactions also took numerous other products with a published record of hepatotoxicity, such as Cassia angustifolia, Hydroxycut and Ephedra sinica (for all three, please see below). Since these two review articles, additional cases have been published from Belgium reporting on a 42-year-old female patient who developed cholestatic hepatitis 6 months after starting Densitive® (Kerastase Nutritients, L'Oréal, Paris), which contains C. sinensis (35). Upon dechallenge, a full recovery was recorded. Other causes of liver injury were carefully excluded, but formal causality assessment using an established score was not performed. In the second case, jaundice, weight loss and subacute hepatitis developed in a 76-year-old man who regularly drank green tea infusions (36). Histology showed marked necro-inflammation, and transiently elevated antismooth muscle auto-antibodies were suggestive of autoimmunity induced by green tea constituents.

The mode of toxicity derived from green tea still remains incompletely understood but could be because of (−)-epigallocatechin gallate or its metabolite (−)-epicatechin gallate, which, under certain conditions such as fasting, can induce oxidative stress-related liver damage (37). Interestingly, in vitro and in vivo experimental studies have demonstrated both hepatoprotective as well as hepatotoxic properties (37–40). Along this line, support for potentially hepatoprotective activity from green tea extracts comes from clinical studies studying its therapeutic effects in humans with liver diseases including liver cancer, cirrhosis and steatosis. Four randomized-controlled clinical trials, two cohort, one case–control and three cross-sectional studies from China, Japan and the USA were recently subjected to a systematic review and found overall favourable effects from green tea as reflected by reduced mortality, attenuated steatosis and reduced incidence of primary liver cancer (41).


Whether the risks from green tea consumption outweigh their benefits remains open, but current evidence as outlined above suggests a causal relationship between intake of green tea-containing products and hepatotoxicity. Consequently, in their systematic review, the US Pharmacopeia included a cautionary statement on green tea indicating this possibility (32).

.

Usnic acid
Some years ago, several cases of acute liver failure requiring liver transplantation following the intake of LipoKinetix®, a product extracted from lichens and fungi and sold as DS capsules, were reported (42–45). Onset of liver injury was usually acute with a maximum latency of 3 months and the injury pattern hepatocellular with massive elevations of ALT and AST. Lipokinetix contained usnic acid and was marketed as a weight-loss remedy. Efficacy for this indication was postulated based on its function as an uncoupler of the respiratory chain, which in principle can augment weight loss (46). Apart from usnic acid, LipoKinetix® contained norephedrine hydrochloride, diiodothyronine, yohimbine hydrochloride and caffeine, which were confirmed by analysing the used LipoKinetix® lots. None of the ingredients were associated previously with liver damage and inadvertent contamination was excluded. These serious events caused the withdrawal of LipoKinetix® from the market.
.

Hydroxycut
Only recently, several Hydroxycut products were retracted by the manufacturer following a warning posted by the FDA in May 2009 because of 23 reports of liver injury including cases with acute hepatic failure and subsequent liver transplantation (47–49). Hydroxycut preparations were sold as powder, capsules and tablets by conventional retailers, through Internet sources and via direct television marketing. Hydroxycut was used to support weight loss and by body builders. The manufacturer had been charged previously with several lawsuits for unfounded health claims. Before May 2009, its primary ingredients included Garcinia cambogia, Gymnema sylvestre, chromium polynicotinate, caffeine and green tea. Published cases were recently reviewed and showed acute onset after several weeks of intake with high levels of serum aminotransferases in the majority of cases, while others presented with a more insidious, usually cholestatic course (50).
.

Miscellaneous
Various other DS have been associated with acute and subacute liver damage such as Senna (C. angustifolia), which is used as a powder, tea or suppository to treat constipation. According to our search, a total of five reports with altogether five individual cases describe the evolution of variable liver pathologies including acute cytolytic hepatitis, subacute cholestatic hepatitis, acute liver failure and portal vein thrombosis upon consumption of Senna products (51–55). In some reports, Senna preparations were self-made or ingested excessively such as in a young woman taking approximately 10 times the recommended dose who developed cytolytic hepatitis, which completely subsided after stopping Senna (51). The causal relationship between the preparation and hepatitis was confirmed through a positive rechallenge in two cases (51, 52). Senna is biotransformed via intestinal bacteria to rhein anthrone, which is highly reactive and requires binding to glucuronide and sulphate via phase I oxidation for renal excretion (56). Rhein anthrone is suspected to function as an uncoupler of the respiratory chain, and can therefore possibly affect hepatocyte integrity under certain circumstances, such as in genetically predisposed individuals. Seybold et al. (52) describe a case of increased toxicity of Senna tea in a homozygous carrier of a genetic cytochrome P450 2D6 variant rendering the individual a poor metabolizer for phase I hepatic detoxification reactions.

Noni juice (Morinda citrifolia) has become increasingly popular in Western countries as a health tonic. Consumption of Noni was the presumed cause of acute hepatitis in a 45-year-old man who drank a glass of this tropical fruit over several weeks for preventive reasons and for ‘strengthening the immune system’ (57). Other possible aetiologies of acute hepatitis were ruled out and liver tests rapidly turned normal after the cessation of Noni intake. Since this first report in 2005, five additional cases have been published from Austria, Germany and Spain (58–61). Remarkably, two patients experienced liver failure of which one required liver transplantation. The pattern of liver injury was hepatocellular in all cases and occurred rapidly within a few weeks of exposure. Causality was formally assessed in two publications, but not considered ‘certain’ in any of the cases because no rechallenge was used. Also, at least two of totally six patients had concomitant medication with known hepatotoxic potential, such as interferon-β (62) and a Chinese herbal mixture (63) respectively. Responsibility of Noni preparations as the cause of liver injury in these cases is challenged by one of the manufacturers of Noni products (64, 65) by demonstrating experimental evidence of no dose-dependent hepatotoxicity and even hepatoprotective properties in some animal models of chronic liver injury (66, 67). However, a lack of dose-dependent hepatotoxicity does not exclude idiosyncratic drug toxicity, e.g. by inducing autoimmune reaction as shown by Yuce et al. (59) who found excessively high liver–kidney microsomal antibodies of 1:3840 in a patient drinking Noni juice for 4 weeks. Nevertheless, the true underlying pathophysiology of Noni-associated liver injury remains elusive because active components within Noni extracts such as flavonoids, glycosides, vitamins, anthraquinones and polyunsaturated fatty acids are not known to be hepatotoxic.


Chinese herbs have become highly popular among consumers in Western countries because of a prevailing belief in their efficacy and safety. Among many others, Ma huang (E. sinica) is marketed in the USA as a nasal decongestant and bronchodilator, and more recently as a weight-loss remedy. The first report of Ma huang-associated liver injury was about a woman developing acute hepatitis together with elevated antinuclear antibodies (ANA) and smooth muscle antibodies (SMA) after only 3 weeks of intake of Ma huang, but liver abnormalities resolved after its discontinuation (68). Another report suggested that intake of Ma huang was the cause of acute liver failure in a 58-year-old patient initiating her listing for high-urgency liver transplantation who also presented with elevated titres of SMA (69). Another report suggested an association of Ma huang-related liver injury with compound heterozygosity for the C282Y and H63D mutation in the haemochromatosis gene, proposing that excess hepatic iron could aggravate hepatotoxicity, possibly via enhancing oxidative stress (70). The largest series on severe liver injury because of the intake of Ma huang by Neff et al. (71) describes 10 cases of acute cytolytic hepatitis of which two subjects required liver transplantation and one died, while the remaining seven patients recovered spontaneously. These cases of severe liver damage and others referring to cardiac toxicity have prompted a warning by the FDA for the use of Epedra-containing DS such as Ma huang (72).


In 1986, Germander (Teucrium chamaedrys) was approved as a drug for the supportive treatment of obesity in France. Its subsequent widespread use precipitated numerous reports on acute, chronic and even fulminant hepatitis to the French pharmacovigilance authorities in 1992 (73–75). Within a median of 2 months, intake of daily doses between 600 and 1600 mg/day precipitated acute cytolytic hepatitis or chronic hepatitis with fibrosis and even cirrhosis (74, 76). All patients recovered after the discontinuation of treatment, but some relapsed under re-exposure. Germander contains saponins, glycosides, flavonoids and neoclerodane diterpenoids, which were shown to be converted into diterpenoid toxic metabolites by cytochrome P450 3A in mice (77). In conditions of glutathione depletion – such as during fasting – or after induction of cytochrome P450 3A, toxic diterpenoids are potent inducers of hepatocyte apoptosis (78, 79). Hence, in 1992, the license for Germander-containing products was withdrawn.


‘Onshidou-Genbi-Kounou’, another herbal marketed for weight loss, seemed the likely cause of chronic hepatitis in a 52-year-old Japanese woman who took this preparation for 2 months (80). Serum levels of liver enzymes were elevated to >1500 IU/l and ANA were positive with 1:160. All other possible causes for chronic hepatitis were excluded, and liver histology was compatible with drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis. The patient recovered completely without intervention on cessation of ‘Onshidou-Genbi-Kounou’ intake. In a larger series from Japan describing 12 patients with acute hepatitis after taking ‘Onshidou-Genbi-Kounou’ and ‘Chaso’ for weight loss, two patients developed liver failure of which one survived after successful liver transplantation and the other one died (81). ‘Onshidou-Genbi-Kounou’ contains several natural compounds (amachazuru, tea leaf, barbaloin, total saponin and polyphenols) and N-nitroso-fenfluramine. The latter demonstrated induction of mitochondrial permeability transition and hepatocyte apoptosis following uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation and intracellular ATP depletion (82, 83).


Vitamin A-associated liver injury

DS fortified with vitamin A are used to prevent night blindness, to increase immune function and to promote health in general. Liver injury related to hypervitaminosis A is well known for many decades and comprises mild elevations of serum liver enzymes, cholestatic hepatitis, non-cirrhotic portal hypertension, progressive fibrosis and cirrhosis (84–87). Toxicity does not usually occur with standard doses below 50 000 IU/day as contained in common multivitamin preparations, but individual tolerability may vary (88). Pre-existing liver lesions including steatosis, chronic alcohol consumption, comedication with other potentially hepatotoxic drugs and young age may predispose certain individuals to develop vitamin A hepatotoxicity (89, 90). Several case reports have demonstrated significant hepatotoxicity with vitamin A doses as low as 20 000 IU/day (91), and upper limits of tolerability may even be lower in regular alcohol consumers (92).



Toxicity is mediated to the dose-dependent effect of retinoids on hepatic stellate cells/portal myofibroblasts (HSC/MFB), which are the key effector cells in the evolution of fibrosis and cirrhosis (93). Upon excessive vitamin A exposure, HSC/MFB start to produce collagens, downregulate collagenase activity and acquire the ability of contraction leading to elevation of blood pressure in the portal vein. In addition to this direct impact on HSC/MFB function and activity, retinoids can be transformed into metabolites that affect mitochondrial function and hepatocyte viability with resulting liver cell apoptosis (94, 95). This was shown to occur particularly when co-administered with alcohol. Dan and colleagues showed that retinoids can be transformed via alcohol-induced cytochrome P450 2E1 into highly reactive and toxic polar metabolites, which cause hepatocyte apoptosis upon caspase 3 activation
(Fig. 2). Hence, health professionals should consult users carefully about the potential dangers of vitamin A, particularly when intended for longer period, in children and regular alcohol consumers.

Anabolic steroids

Anabolic steroids are an integral part of the nutritional concept of many athletes to improve fitness, muscle gain and exercise performance. Their use is widespread although anabolics are classified as class III substances and therefore subdued to strict rules (96). However, access via inofficial and sometimes illegal sources is easy, and therefore, in spite of tight rules, further adverse hepatic reactions following the consumption of anabolic steroids can be expected. Hepatotoxicity has been frequently described and patterns of injury delineated. Liver lesions include intrahepatic cholestasis, hepatitis, adenoma and hepatocellular carcinoma and rare malformations such as peliosis hepatis, a rare pathological entity characterized by the gross appearance of multiple cyst-like, blood-filled cavities within the liver (97, 98). A recent case series demonstrated the evolution of cholestasis 2 weeks after the intake of anabolic steroids had been stopped. All patients recovered fully after intake had been terminated (99). Even more worrisome is the observation that some DS may contain anabolic steroids sufficient to precipitate liver injury, as demonstrated by a recent case report showing cholestasis in two young men who took DS to enhance their body-building performance (100). Another case presented with a less favourable course as prolonged intrahepatic cholestasis and subsequent kidney failure developed (101). The precise mechanism underlying toxicity is yet unclear, but experimental data indicate direct hepatocellular toxicity from steroids via increased oxidative stress and subsequent impairment of function of the canalicular bile salt export pump (100).


A recent case–control study from Brazil suggested that anabolic steroids could be a cause of toxicant-associated non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (TAFLD) by comparing 95 recreational body builders using anabolic steroids with 85 non-users. In those consuming anabolic steroids, 12.6% of subjects revealed criteria compatible with TAFLD such as steatosis on ultrasound imaging, elevated serum transaminases and exclusion of relevant alcohol intake or concomitant medication, but no overweight or insulin resistance suggestive of metabolic NAFLD. In turn, 2.4% of body builders not using anabolic steroids showed clinical signs and findings suggestive of NAFLD. The authors concluded that the intake of anabolic steroids could be a cause of non-metabolic, but toxicant-associated NAFLD (102).

.

Conclusion
References
Hepatic injury secondary to consumption of DS is recognized, although its exact frequency remains unclear, mostly because evidence relies exclusively on case reports. Lack of stringent diagnostic criteria, poor awareness of consumers and prescribers, easy and uncontrolled access and under-reporting account for this epidemiological gap of knowledge. Diagnostic assessment of DS-associated should be made more consistent, and customized specifically to DS. Although causality categories reached in many of the published reports suggest a causal relationship between liver injury and the intake of certain DS products, pitfalls exist related to the used diagnostic scales, which have all been criticized for variable reasons and of which none is unequivocally accepted as being suitable for the evaluation of DS as a cause of liver injury. While the WHO score is not specifically designed to evaluate DILI (103), the Naranjo adverse drug reaction probability scale (33) was recently found to have low sensitivity (54%), poor negative predictive value (29%) and to lack reproducibility in a large series of cases of suspected hepatotoxicity (104) when compared with the Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM) (26, 105). A clinical diagnostic scale has been suggested as a simple tool to assess adverse hepatic drug reactions and showed good correlation with RUCAM in one study (106), but not in another (107). To conclude, all used scores reveal merits and limitations, but a common consensus on which one is the best to apply in causality assessment of DS-associated liver damage has never been reached. In an approach to compensate for this lack of common agreement, recently, the DILIN was established to advance our understanding and research into DILI by initiating a prospective registry of patients with DILI for future studies into host clinical, genetic, environmental and immunological risk factors, and to develop standardized nomenclature, terminology and causality assessment instruments (108). Patients with liver injury because of herbal products are also eligible to be included. Herein, a causality score ranging from 1 (definite) to 5 (unlikely) as well as a severity score ranging from 1 (mild) to 5 (fatal) is applied by three hepatologists of the DILIN study group, thereby minimizing individual biases. In addition to accounting for the input of the reporting investigator who took the history, performed the physical examination and supervised the data collection, a prospective evaluation of other potential causes of liver injury and serial laboratory data through at least 6 months of follow-up are offered. However, the DILIN expert opinion is limited by its lack of generalizability and a low level of agreement between the three hepatologists (109). Hence, a certain degree of inaccuracy in assigning causality remains until better diagnostic measures are established.

Apart from diagnostic measures, better regulatory measures to assure safety and timely recognition of potentially harmful products require improvement and, thus, efforts of pharmacovigilance authorities and healthcare providers must jointly act to minimize risks and protect consumers. Manufactures must spend utmost care in providing users with clean and unadulterated products and should be held liable if this accidentally or carelessly fails. Finally, consumers should develop a more critical attitude towards the expectations and hopes associated with DS use in largely healthy individuals, and turn to measures for which safety data are known, and efficacy is proven.

Hepatitis C Research and News 

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

 Review of liver injury associated with dietary supplements 

Liver International
Early View (Articles online in advance of print)

Felix Stickel
1, Kerstin Kessebohm 2, Rosemarie Weimann 3, Helmut K. Seitz 4

Article first published online: 11 JAN 2011

DOI: 10.1111/j.1478-3231.2010.02439.x
© 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S


Author Information
1 Department of Visceral Surgery and Medicine, Institute of Clinical Pharmacology and Visceral Research, Inselspital, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland
2 Institute of Clinical Pharmacology and Visceral Research, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland
3 Institute of Pathology, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland
4 Department of Medicine, Center of Alcohol Research, Liver Disease and Nutrition, Salem Medical Center, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
* Correspondence: Correspondence Felix Stickel, MD, Department of Visceral Surgery and Medicine, Institute of Clinical Pharmacology and Visceral Research, Inselspital, University of Bern, Murtenstr. 35, 3010 Bern, Switzerland Tel: +41 31 632 87 28 Fax: +41 31 632 49 97 e-mail: felix.stickel@ikp.unibe.ch

Keywords:
anabolic steroids; Camellia sinensis; cholestasis; hepatitis; retinoid toxicity; toxic liver injury

Abstract

Dietary supplements (DS) are easily available and increasingly used, and adverse hepatic reactions have been reported following their intake. To critically review the literature on liver injury because of DSs, delineating patterns and mechanisms of injury and to increase the awareness towards this cause of acute and chronic liver damage. Studies and case reports on liver injury specifically because of DSs published between 1990 and 2010 were searched in the PubMed and EMBASE data bases using the terms ‘dietary/nutritional supplements’, ‘adverse hepatic reactions’, ‘liver injury’; ‘hepatitis’, ‘liver failure’, ‘vitamin A’ and ‘retinoids’, and reviewed for yet unidentified publications. Significant liver injury was reported after intake of Herbalife® and Hydroxycut products, tea extracts from Camellia sinensis, products containing usnic acid and high contents of vitamin A, anabolic steroids and others. No uniform pattern of hepatotoxicity has been identified and severity may range from asymptomatic elevations of serum liver enzymes to hepatic failure and death. Exact estimates on how frequent adverse hepatic reactions occur as a result of DSs cannot be provided. Liver injury from DSs mimicking other liver diseases is increasingly recognized. Measures to reduce risk include tighter regulation of their production and distribution and increased awareness of users and professionals of the potential risks.


Abbreviations

ALF, acute liver failure; DILI, drug-induced liver injury; DS, dietary supplements; FDA, Food and Drug Administration; HSC/MFB, hepatic stellate cells/portal myofibroblasts

The use of dietary supplements (DS) containing vitamins, anti-oxidants, fibre, trace elements, proteins, amino acids and herbal constituents has become a major health trend in affluent societies (1, 2). Consumption of DS in the USA has doubled to 18.9% of adults admitting their use only between 1999 and 2004 (3, 4); some investigations report their consumption up to 47% in certain subgroups such as among elder, non-smoking females with higher education (5). The rising popularity of DS is probably because of an increased awareness of consumers towards health in general and the desire to prevent diseases by an optimized nutritional status, and the persuasion that these treatments are safe (1, 2, 5, 6). Further, DS do not require prescriptions from health professionals allowing largely unrestricted access to relatively cheap products. Consequently, marketing such products has become a multibillion business largely unregulated by official health authorities (6–8).


In the USA, DS are expected to meet the standards outlined in the Dietary Supplement and Health Education Act published in 1994, which allows distribution without prior approval of their efficacy and safety by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (9). This simplified licensing practice does not ensure efficacy and safety in the same strict way as with the approval of conventional medications and treatments. Similarly, the European Union has set forth legislative measures for the distribution and marketing of DS and functional foods that are outlined in the European Commission 2000 White Paper on Food Safety (10, 11). This set of legislation pays tribute to the fact that DS may harbour specific problems because of their complex composition, particularly with respect to quality aspects, and defines guidelines for conducting premarketing in vitro and in vivo studies.


While adverse hepatic reactions from xenobiotics are well documented by pre- and post-marketing pharmacovigilance, the situation for DS is less well depicted as widespread and uncontrolled use and under-reporting prevent the determination of their true incidence. Additionally, a low awareness of users and providers towards their potential harms impedes their recognition as the causative agent in incidents of hepatotoxicity. Consequently, estimates of the frequency of DS-associated hepatic injury are likely imprecise and, possibly, too low. The proportion of hepatotoxicity ascribed to DS varies from 2% in a Spanish study (12) describing 531 cases of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) to approximately 10% in a series from the US Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network (DILIN) (13). Figures were as high as 35% in a small series of 20 patients developing acute liver failure with DS exposure as the only identifiable cause of liver damage (14).


Our article aimed to review and describe the literature on liver injury because of DS, delineate patterns and mechanisms of injury and to increase the awareness towards this possible cause of acute and chronic liver damage.



Literature search methodology


In February 2010, case reports and series thereof on liver injury specifically occurring following the consumption of DS published between 1990 and 2010 were searched in PubMed and EMBASE data bases using the terms ‘adverse hepatic reactions’, ‘anabolic steroids’, ‘Camellia sinensis’, ‘dietary/nutritional supplements’, ‘Herbalife’, ‘hepatitis’, ‘Hydroxycut’, ‘green tea’, ‘liver failure’, ‘liver injury’, ‘Noni’, ‘retinoids’, ‘vitamin A’ and critically reviewed. Retrieved publications were searched for yet unidentified publications. Remedies were considered DS if consumed as an aid to improve nutritional status, to loose weight or to treat constipation. Cases of liver injury from preparations taken for other causes than nutritional purposes were not included. No language restriction was used.




 
While hepatotoxicity from herbal medicines in general has been addressed in several reviews (15–18), summaries specifically devoted to liver-related risks along with DS are scarce (19). In the following, a panel of rather distinct DS preparations associated with liver injury are described ( Table 1).



Table 1.   Nutritional supplements associated with liver injury (n>1 case)
Dietary supplementIndication for useLiver lesionToxicity mechanisms
  1. HSC, hepatic stellate cells; MFB, portal myofibroblasts.
Herbalife®Various (weight loss, nutritional support, ‘well-being’)Variable (acute and chronic hepatitis, cholestasis, cirrhosis, hepatic failure)Unknown; autoimmunity? Bacterial contamination?
Camellia sinensis (green tea)Weight lossAcute hepatitisOxidative stress from (−)-epigallocatechin gallate?
LipoKinetix®Weight lossAcute hepatitisUncoupling of respiratory chain?
HydroxycutWeight lossAcute and/or cholestatic hepatitis, liver failureUnknown
Senna (Cassia angustifolia)ConstipationVariable (acute hepatitis, granulomatous hepatitis, cirrhosis)Drug idiosyncrasy (CYP2D6 variation)?; uncoupling of respiratory chain?
Noni juice (Morinda citrifolia)‘Immunostimulation’, health tonicAcute hepatitis, hepatic failureUnknown; drug-induced autoimmunity?
Ma huang (Ephedra sinica)Weight lossAcute hepatitis, hepatic failureUnknown; drug-induced autoimmunity? Oxidative stress?
Germander (Teucrium chamaedrys)Weight lossAcute, and fulminant hepatitis, chronic hepatitis with fibrosis/cirrhosisHepatocyte apoptosis from toxic neoclerodane diterpenoids
‘Onshidou-Genbi-Kounou’, ‘Chaso’ (Japanese herbals)Weight lossAcute hepatitis, hepatic failureHepatocyte apoptosis due to N-nitroso-fenfluramine
Vitamin ADisease prevention, immune functionChronic hepatitis, cholestasis, cirrhosisFibrosis from HSC/MFB activation; formation of toxic polar retinoid metabolites with concomitant alcohol consumption
Anabolic steroidsMuscle build-upCholestasis, benign/malignant liver tumoursDysfunction of biliary transporter

Specific dietary supplements associated with liver injury

Herbalife®

Herbalife® (Los Angeles, CA, USA) sells nutritional and herbal supplements as tablets, capsules, drinks and energy bars for weight control, improvement of nutrition, ‘well-being’ and cosmetics. In 2006, the stock market quoted that Herbalife® company had a revenue of US$3.1 billion via online marketing or through independently operating sales agents.
There are so far six published reports on liver damage following the intake of Herbalife® products since 2007 describing 34 cases from five countries (Switzerland, Israel, Spain, Argentina and Iceland), although Herbalife® products are sold in at least 60 countries worldwide (20–25). Individual data of all reports are displayed in Table 2. Pattern of injury was mostly hepatocellular, but mixed and cholestatic enzyme patterns were also observed. Severity ranged from mild to severe hepatic damage including cirrhosis and acute liver failure requiring liver transplantation, which was successful in one patient while the second died because of post-operative complications. Causality between intake of Herbalife® products and the evolution of liver injury was assessed by widely used scores (26, 27) in five of the six reports and considered ‘certain’ in at least five patients by a positive rechallenge reaction and ‘probable’ in the majority of the remaining cases (20, 21).
Table 2.   Case reports on liver injury following the intake of Herbalife® products
AuthorPatients (n)Type and number of productsDuration of intake (months)Type of injuryOutcomeCausality assessment
  • *
    Contains case reported in Hoffmann et al. (28):
  • F, female; M, male.
Elinav et al. (20)12 (11F)Variable; between 6 and 17 different products2–28Hepatocellular (n=11), mixed (n=1)Recovery (n=11), death (n=1)WHO score; certain (n=3; positive rechallenge); probable (n=6); possible (n=3)
Schoepfer et al. (21)*10 (7F)Variable; between 3 and 13 different products2–26Hepatocellular (n=9), mixed (n=1)Recovery (n=8), liver transplantation (n=1), cirrhosis (n=1)WHO score; certain (n=2; positive rechallenge); probable (n=7); possible (n=1)
Duque et al. (22)4 (4F)Nine different products1–26Hepatocellular (n=2); mixed (n=2)Recovery of all fourNot assessed
Chao et al. (23)1 (F)Three different products2.5MixedRecoveryWHO score; probable
Stickel et al. (24)2 (1F)Variable; between six and eight different products12–36Mixed (n=1), cholestatic (n=1)Recovery (n=1), cirrhosis (n=1)CIOMS; probable (n=2)
Johannsson et al. (25)5 (4F)Variable; between two and five different products1–7Hepatocellular (n=3), cholestatic (n=2)Recovery (n=5)RUCAM; probable (n=3), possible (n=2); WHO; certain (n=1), probable (n=2), possible (n=2)

Specific dietary supplements associated with liver injury


Herbalife® (Los Angeles, CA, USA) sells nutritional and herbal supplements as tablets, capsules, drinks and energy bars for weight control, improvement of nutrition, ‘well-being’ and cosmetics. In 2006, the stock market quoted that Herbalife® company had a revenue of US$3.1 billion via online marketing or through independently operating sales agents.


There are so far six published reports on liver damage following the intake of Herbalife® products since 2007 describing 34 cases from five countries (Switzerland, Israel, Spain, Argentina and Iceland), although Herbalife® products are sold in at least 60 countries worldwide (20–25). Individual data of all reports are displayed in
Table 2. Pattern of injury was mostly hepatocellular, but mixed and cholestatic enzyme patterns were also observed. Severity ranged from mild to severe hepatic damage including cirrhosis and acute liver failure requiring liver transplantation, which was successful in one patient while the second died because of post-operative complications. Causality between intake of Herbalife® products and the evolution of liver injury was assessed by widely used scores (26, 27) in five of the six reports and considered ‘certain’ in at least five patients by a positive rechallenge reaction and ‘probable’ in the majority of the remaining cases (20, 21).

Figure 1. Liver histology from a patient with secondary biliary cirrhosis following long-term intake of numerous Herbalife® nutritional supplements contaminated with Bacillus subtilis. (A) Enlargement of portal tracts with fibrosis, chronic inflammation and porto-lobular interface activity as well as ductular proliferation of the bile ducts with reactive changes of the epithelium (HE staining). (B) Immunohistochemistry with anticytokeratin 7 indicating bile duct such as loss of biliary lumina and significant lympho-epithelial infiltration (see arrow).

Camellia sinensis (green tea)
 
Green tea is among the most frequently consumed drinks in the USA and often used as a DS. The first report on liver injury following the ingestion of green tea extracts and preparations thereof was published in 1999 (31), and since then, numerous consecutive cases were reported to regulatory agencies worldwide. With effect of April 2003, the manufacturer of Exolise® (Arkopharma, Carros, France), a hydro-alcoholic extract of C. sinensis, has revocated all of their products after altogether 13 cases of acute liver damage following its intake were reported to the French pharmacovigilance authorities (Agence Francaise de Securité Sanitaire de Produits de Sanité; http://www.afssaps.sante.fr/). As a reaction to these accumulating reports, the US Pharmacopeia performed a systematic review of all cases accessible from PubMed, EMBASE and pharmacovigilance data bases in the USA, Canada, UK and Australia reporting on 34 single cases of liver injury following the ingestion of numerous different green tea preparations (32). Herein, case reports were retrospectively evaluated according to the Naranjo causality algorithm scale (33), and 27 reports pertaining to liver damage were labelled as ‘possibly’ and the remaining seven cases as ‘probably’ linked to green tea. Another Medline search review of cases on green tea liver injury from the same year also retrieved 34 published reports and described two further yet unpublished cases (34). On histological examination, livers of patients revealed inflammatory reactions, cholestasis, occasionally steatosis and necrosis. Although there was some overlap of single reports between these two review articles, collected case reports were not identical and jointly provided details on 58 cases of hepatotoxicity along with the intake of green tea extracts, powdered leaves, green tea infusions and hydro-alcoholic and aqueous extracts. In Mazzanti's summary, no causality re-evaluation was performed, but information on de- and rechallenge is provided for every case indicating a positive rechallenge response with accelerated recurrence of liver injury in seven of 36 incidents, which strongly suggests a causal relationship between the observed liver injury and green tea consumption. Of concern is that there was one reported death. However, a note of caution is warranted in many of the cases regarding an exclusive assignment of causality to green tea, because many patients who experienced adverse hepatic reactions also took numerous other products with a published record of hepatotoxicity, such as Cassia angustifolia, Hydroxycut and Ephedra sinica (for all three, please see below). Since these two review articles, additional cases have been published from Belgium reporting on a 42-year-old female patient who developed cholestatic hepatitis 6 months after starting Densitive® (Kerastase Nutritients, L'Oréal, Paris), which contains C. sinensis (35). Upon dechallenge, a full recovery was recorded. Other causes of liver injury were carefully excluded, but formal causality assessment using an established score was not performed. In the second case, jaundice, weight loss and subacute hepatitis developed in a 76-year-old man who regularly drank green tea infusions (36). Histology showed marked necro-inflammation, and transiently elevated antismooth muscle auto-antibodies were suggestive of autoimmunity induced by green tea constituents.

The mode of toxicity derived from green tea still remains incompletely understood but could be because of (−)-epigallocatechin gallate or its metabolite (−)-epicatechin gallate, which, under certain conditions such as fasting, can induce oxidative stress-related liver damage (37). Interestingly, in vitro and in vivo experimental studies have demonstrated both hepatoprotective as well as hepatotoxic properties (37–40). Along this line, support for potentially hepatoprotective activity from green tea extracts comes from clinical studies studying its therapeutic effects in humans with liver diseases including liver cancer, cirrhosis and steatosis. Four randomized-controlled clinical trials, two cohort, one case–control and three cross-sectional studies from China, Japan and the USA were recently subjected to a systematic review and found overall favourable effects from green tea as reflected by reduced mortality, attenuated steatosis and reduced incidence of primary liver cancer (41).


Whether the risks from green tea consumption outweigh their benefits remains open, but current evidence as outlined above suggests a causal relationship between intake of green tea-containing products and hepatotoxicity. Consequently, in their systematic review, the US Pharmacopeia included a cautionary statement on green tea indicating this possibility (32).

 

Usnic acid


Some years ago, several cases of acute liver failure requiring liver transplantation following the intake of LipoKinetix®, a product extracted from lichens and fungi and sold as DS capsules, were reported (42–45). Onset of liver injury was usually acute with a maximum latency of 3 months and the injury pattern hepatocellular with massive elevations of ALT and AST. Lipokinetix contained usnic acid and was marketed as a weight-loss remedy. Efficacy for this indication was postulated based on its function as an uncoupler of the respiratory chain, which in principle can augment weight loss (46). Apart from usnic acid, LipoKinetix® contained norephedrine hydrochloride, diiodothyronine, yohimbine hydrochloride and caffeine, which were confirmed by analysing the used LipoKinetix® lots. None of the ingredients were associated previously with liver damage and inadvertent contamination was excluded. These serious events caused the withdrawal of LipoKinetix® from the market.


Hydroxycut


Only recently, several Hydroxycut products were retracted by the manufacturer following a warning posted by the FDA in May 2009 because of 23 reports of liver injury including cases with acute hepatic failure and subsequent liver transplantation (47–49). Hydroxycut preparations were sold as powder, capsules and tablets by conventional retailers, through Internet sources and via direct television marketing. Hydroxycut was used to support weight loss and by body builders. The manufacturer had been charged previously with several lawsuits for unfounded health claims. Before May 2009, its primary ingredients included Garcinia cambogia, Gymnema sylvestre, chromium polynicotinate, caffeine and green tea. Published cases were recently reviewed and showed acute onset after several weeks of intake with high levels of serum aminotransferases in the majority of cases, while others presented with a more insidious, usually cholestatic course (50).


Miscellaneous


Various other DS have been associated with acute and subacute liver damage such as Senna (C. angustifolia), which is used as a powder, tea or suppository to treat constipation. According to our search, a total of five reports with altogether five individual cases describe the evolution of variable liver pathologies including acute cytolytic hepatitis, subacute cholestatic hepatitis, acute liver failure and portal vein thrombosis upon consumption of Senna products (51–55). In some reports, Senna preparations were self-made or ingested excessively such as in a young woman taking approximately 10 times the recommended dose who developed cytolytic hepatitis, which completely subsided after stopping Senna (51). The causal relationship between the preparation and hepatitis was confirmed through a positive rechallenge in two cases (51, 52). Senna is biotransformed via intestinal bacteria to rhein anthrone, which is highly reactive and requires binding to glucuronide and sulphate via phase I oxidation for renal excretion (56). Rhein anthrone is suspected to function as an uncoupler of the respiratory chain, and can therefore possibly affect hepatocyte integrity under certain circumstances, such as in genetically predisposed individuals. Seybold et al. (52) describe a case of increased toxicity of Senna tea in a homozygous carrier of a genetic cytochrome P450 2D6 variant rendering the individual a poor metabolizer for phase I hepatic detoxification reactions.


Noni juice (Morinda citrifolia) has become increasingly popular in Western countries as a health tonic. Consumption of Noni was the presumed cause of acute hepatitis in a 45-year-old man who drank a glass of this tropical fruit over several weeks for preventive reasons and for ‘strengthening the immune system’ (57). Other possible aetiologies of acute hepatitis were ruled out and liver tests rapidly turned normal after the cessation of Noni intake. Since this first report in 2005, five additional cases have been published from Austria, Germany and Spain (58–61). Remarkably, two patients experienced liver failure of which one required liver transplantation. The pattern of liver injury was hepatocellular in all cases and occurred rapidly within a few weeks of exposure. Causality was formally assessed in two publications, but not considered ‘certain’ in any of the cases because no rechallenge was used. Also, at least two of totally six patients had concomitant medication with known hepatotoxic potential, such as interferon-β (62) and a Chinese herbal mixture (63) respectively. Responsibility of Noni preparations as the cause of liver injury in these cases is challenged by one of the manufacturers of Noni products (64, 65) by demonstrating experimental evidence of no dose-dependent hepatotoxicity and even hepatoprotective properties in some animal models of chronic liver injury (66, 67). However, a lack of dose-dependent hepatotoxicity does not exclude idiosyncratic drug toxicity, e.g. by inducing autoimmune reaction as shown by Yuce et al. (59) who found excessively high liver–kidney microsomal antibodies of 1:3840 in a patient drinking Noni juice for 4 weeks. Nevertheless, the true underlying pathophysiology of Noni-associated liver injury remains elusive because active components within Noni extracts such as flavonoids, glycosides, vitamins, anthraquinones and polyunsaturated fatty acids are not known to be hepatotoxic.


Chinese herbs have become highly popular among consumers in Western countries because of a prevailing belief in their efficacy and safety. Among many others, Ma huang (E. sinica) is marketed in the USA as a nasal decongestant and bronchodilator, and more recently as a weight-loss remedy. The first report of Ma huang-associated liver injury was about a woman developing acute hepatitis together with elevated antinuclear antibodies (ANA) and smooth muscle antibodies (SMA) after only 3 weeks of intake of Ma huang, but liver abnormalities resolved after its discontinuation (68). Another report suggested that intake of Ma huang was the cause of acute liver failure in a 58-year-old patient initiating her listing for high-urgency liver transplantation who also presented with elevated titres of SMA (69). Another report suggested an association of Ma huang-related liver injury with compound heterozygosity for the C282Y and H63D mutation in the haemochromatosis gene, proposing that excess hepatic iron could aggravate hepatotoxicity, possibly via enhancing oxidative stress (70). The largest series on severe liver injury because of the intake of Ma huang by Neff et al. (71) describes 10 cases of acute cytolytic hepatitis of which two subjects required liver transplantation and one died, while the remaining seven patients recovered spontaneously. These cases of severe liver damage and others referring to cardiac toxicity have prompted a warning by the FDA for the use of Epedra-containing DS such as Ma huang (72).


In 1986, Germander (Teucrium chamaedrys) was approved as a drug for the supportive treatment of obesity in France. Its subsequent widespread use precipitated numerous reports on acute, chronic and even fulminant hepatitis to the French pharmacovigilance authorities in 1992 (73–75). Within a median of 2 months, intake of daily doses between 600 and 1600 mg/day precipitated acute cytolytic hepatitis or chronic hepatitis with fibrosis and even cirrhosis (74, 76). All patients recovered after the discontinuation of treatment, but some relapsed under re-exposure. Germander contains saponins, glycosides, flavonoids and neoclerodane diterpenoids, which were shown to be converted into diterpenoid toxic metabolites by cytochrome P450 3A in mice (77). In conditions of glutathione depletion – such as during fasting – or after induction of cytochrome P450 3A, toxic diterpenoids are potent inducers of hepatocyte apoptosis (78, 79). Hence, in 1992, the license for Germander-containing products was withdrawn.


‘Onshidou-Genbi-Kounou’, another herbal marketed for weight loss, seemed the likely cause of chronic hepatitis in a 52-year-old Japanese woman who took this preparation for 2 months (80). Serum levels of liver enzymes were elevated to >1500 IU/l and ANA were positive with 1:160. All other possible causes for chronic hepatitis were excluded, and liver histology was compatible with drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis. The patient recovered completely without intervention on cessation of ‘Onshidou-Genbi-Kounou’ intake. In a larger series from Japan describing 12 patients with acute hepatitis after taking ‘Onshidou-Genbi-Kounou’ and ‘Chaso’ for weight loss, two patients developed liver failure of which one survived after successful liver transplantation and the other one died (81). ‘Onshidou-Genbi-Kounou’ contains several natural compounds (amachazuru, tea leaf, barbaloin, total saponin and polyphenols) and N-nitroso-fenfluramine. The latter demonstrated induction of mitochondrial permeability transition and hepatocyte apoptosis following uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation and intracellular ATP depletion (82, 83).


Vitamin A-associated liver injury


DS fortified with vitamin A are used to prevent night blindness, to increase immune function and to promote health in general. Liver injury related to hypervitaminosis A is well known for many decades and comprises mild elevations of serum liver enzymes, cholestatic hepatitis, non-cirrhotic portal hypertension, progressive fibrosis and cirrhosis (84–87). Toxicity does not usually occur with standard doses below 50 000 IU/day as contained in common multivitamin preparations, but individual tolerability may vary (88). Pre-existing liver lesions including steatosis, chronic alcohol consumption, comedication with other potentially hepatotoxic drugs and young age may predispose certain individuals to develop vitamin A hepatotoxicity (89, 90). Several case reports have demonstrated significant hepatotoxicity with vitamin A doses as low as 20 000 IU/day (91), and upper limits of tolerability may even be lower in regular alcohol consumers (92).


Toxicity is mediated to the dose-dependent effect of retinoids on hepatic stellate cells/portal myofibroblasts (HSC/MFB), which are the key effector cells in the evolution of fibrosis and cirrhosis (93). Upon excessive vitamin A exposure, HSC/MFB start to produce collagens, downregulate collagenase activity and acquire the ability of contraction leading to elevation of blood pressure in the portal vein. In addition to this direct impact on HSC/MFB function and activity, retinoids can be transformed into metabolites that affect mitochondrial function and hepatocyte viability with resulting liver cell apoptosis (94, 95). This was shown to occur particularly when co-administered with alcohol. Dan and colleagues showed that retinoids can be transformed via alcohol-induced cytochrome P450 2E1 into highly reactive and toxic polar metabolites, which cause hepatocyte apoptosis upon caspase 3 activation (Fig. 2). Hence, health professionals should consult users carefully about the potential dangers of vitamin A, particularly when intended for longer period, in children and regular alcohol consumers.


Figure 2. Retinoids are substrates of cytochrome P450 2E1 and may be transformed into toxic polar retinoid metabolites. These can damage mitochondria by disrupting the mitochondrial membrane potential, releasing pro-apoptotic factors (e.g. cytochrome C) and initiating caspase activation and hepatocellular apoptosis.

Anabolic steroids

Anabolic steroids are an integral part of the nutritional concept of many athletes to improve fitness, muscle gain and exercise performance. Their use is widespread although anabolics are classified as class III substances and therefore subdued to strict rules (96). However, access via inofficial and sometimes illegal sources is easy, and therefore, in spite of tight rules, further adverse hepatic reactions following the consumption of anabolic steroids can be expected. Hepatotoxicity has been frequently described and patterns of injury delineated. Liver lesions include intrahepatic cholestasis, hepatitis, adenoma and hepatocellular carcinoma and rare malformations such as peliosis hepatis, a rare pathological entity characterized by the gross appearance of multiple cyst-like, blood-filled cavities within the liver (97, 98). A recent case series demonstrated the evolution of cholestasis 2 weeks after the intake of anabolic steroids had been stopped. All patients recovered fully after intake had been terminated (99). Even more worrisome is the observation that some DS may contain anabolic steroids sufficient to precipitate liver injury, as demonstrated by a recent case report showing cholestasis in two young men who took DS to enhance their body-building performance (100). Another case presented with a less favourable course as prolonged intrahepatic cholestasis and subsequent kidney failure developed (101). The precise mechanism underlying toxicity is yet unclear, but experimental data indicate direct hepatocellular toxicity from steroids via increased oxidative stress and subsequent impairment of function of the canalicular bile salt export pump (100).


A recent case–control study from Brazil suggested that anabolic steroids could be a cause of toxicant-associated non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (TAFLD) by comparing 95 recreational body builders using anabolic steroids with 85 non-users. In those consuming anabolic steroids, 12.6% of subjects revealed criteria compatible with TAFLD such as steatosis on ultrasound imaging, elevated serum transaminases and exclusion of relevant alcohol intake or concomitant medication, but no overweight or insulin resistance suggestive of metabolic NAFLD. In turn, 2.4% of body builders not using anabolic steroids showed clinical signs and findings suggestive of NAFLD. The authors concluded that the intake of anabolic steroids could be a cause of non-metabolic, but toxicant-associated NAFLD (102).



Conclusion 
 

Hepatic injury secondary to consumption of DS is recognized, although its exact frequency remains unclear, mostly because evidence relies exclusively on case reports. Lack of stringent diagnostic criteria, poor awareness of consumers and prescribers, easy and uncontrolled access and under-reporting account for this epidemiological gap of knowledge. Diagnostic assessment of DS-associated should be made more consistent, and customized specifically to DS. Although causality categories reached in many of the published reports suggest a causal relationship between liver injury and the intake of certain DS products, pitfalls exist related to the used diagnostic scales, which have all been criticized for variable reasons and of which none is unequivocally accepted as being suitable for the evaluation of DS as a cause of liver injury. While the WHO score is not specifically designed to evaluate DILI (103), the Naranjo adverse drug reaction probability scale (33) was recently found to have low sensitivity (54%), poor negative predictive value (29%) and to lack reproducibility in a large series of cases of suspected hepatotoxicity (104) when compared with the Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM) (26, 105). A clinical diagnostic scale has been suggested as a simple tool to assess adverse hepatic drug reactions and showed good correlation with RUCAM in one study (106), but not in another (107). To conclude, all used scores reveal merits and limitations, but a common consensus on which one is the best to apply in causality assessment of DS-associated liver damage has never been reached. In an approach to compensate for this lack of common agreement, recently, the DILIN was established to advance our understanding and research into DILI by initiating a prospective registry of patients with DILI for future studies into host clinical, genetic, environmental and immunological risk factors, and to develop standardized nomenclature, terminology and causality assessment instruments (108). Patients with liver injury because of herbal products are also eligible to be included. Herein, a causality score ranging from 1 (definite) to 5 (unlikely) as well as a severity score ranging from 1 (mild) to 5 (fatal) is applied by three hepatologists of the DILIN study group, thereby minimizing individual biases. In addition to accounting for the input of the reporting investigator who took the history, performed the physical examination and supervised the data collection, a prospective evaluation of other potential causes of liver injury and serial laboratory data through at least 6 months of follow-up are offered. However, the DILIN expert opinion is limited by its lack of generalizability and a low level of agreement between the three hepatologists (109). Hence, a certain degree of inaccuracy in assigning causality remains until better diagnostic measures are established.


Apart from diagnostic measures, better regulatory measures to assure safety and timely recognition of potentially harmful products require improvement and, thus, efforts of pharmacovigilance authorities and healthcare providers must jointly act to minimize risks and protect consumers. Manufactures must spend utmost care in providing users with clean and unadulterated products and should be held liable if this accidentally or carelessly fails. Finally, consumers should develop a more critical attitude towards the expectations and hopes associated with DS use in largely healthy individuals, and turn to measures for which safety data are known, and efficacy is proven.


 

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54 Sonmez A, Yilmaz MI, Mas R, et al. Subacute cholestatic hepatitis likely related to the use of senna for chronic constipation. Acta Gastroenterol Belg 2005; 68: 385–7.


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58 Stadlbauer V, Fickert P, Lackner C, et al. Hepatotoxicity of NONI juice: report of two cases. World J Gastroenterol 2005; 11: 4758–60.


59 Yuce B, Gulberg V, Diebold J, Gerbes AL. Hepatitis induced by Noni juice from Morinda citrifolia: a rare cause of hepatotoxicity or the tip of the iceberg? Digestion 2006; 73: 167–70.


60 López-Cepero Andrada JM, Lerma Castilla S, Fernández Olvera MD, Amaya Vidal A. Hepatotoxicity caused by a Noni (Morinda citrifolia) preparation. Rev Esp Enferm Dig 2007; 99: 179–81 (in Spanish).


61 Stadlbauer V, Weiss S, Payer F, Stauber RE. Herbal does not at all mean innocuous: the sixth case of hepatotoxicity associated with Morinda citrifolia (noni). Am J Gastroenterol 2008; 103: 2406–7.


62 Duchini A. Autoimmune hepatitis and interferon beta-1a for multiple sclerosis. Am J Gastroenterol 2002; 97: 767–8.


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64 West BJ. Hepatotoxicity from interferon-beta, not noni juice. Digestion 2006; 74: 47–8.


65 West BJ, Jensen CJ, Westendorf J. Noni juice is not hepatotoxic. World J Gastroenterol 2006; 12: 3616–9.


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67 Wang MY, Anderson G, Nowicki D, Jensen J. Hepatic protection by noni fruit juice against CCl(4)-induced chronic liver damage in female SD rats. Plant Foods Hum Nutr 2008; 63: 141–5.


68 Nadir A, Agrawal S, King PD, Marshall JB. Acute hepatitis associated with the use of a Chinese herbal product, Ma-Huang. Am J Gastroenterol 1996; 91: 1436–8.


69 Borum ML. Fulminant exacerbation of autoimmune hepatitis after the use of Ma huang. Am J Gastroenterol 2001; 96: 1654–5.


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71 Neff GW, Reddy KR, Durazo FA, et al. Severe hepatotoxicity associated with the use of weight loss diet supplements containing ma huang or usnic acid. J Hepatol 2004; 41: 1062–4.


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75 Mostefa-Kara N, Pauwels A, Pines E, et al. Fatal hepatitis after herbal tea. Lancet 1992; 340: 674.


76 Dao T, Peytier A, Galateau F, Valla A. Hépatite chronique cirrhogene a la germandrée petit-chene. Gastroenterol Clin Biol 1993; 17: 609–10.


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78 Lekehal M, Pessayre D, Lereau JM, et al. Hepatotoxicity of the herbal medicine, germander. Metabolic activation of its furano diterpenoids by cytochrome P450 3A depletes cytoskeleton-associated protein thiols and forms plasma membrane blebs in rat hepatocytes. Hepatology 1996; 24: 212–8.


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80 Kanda T, Yokosuka O, Tada M, et al. N-nitroso-fenfluramine hepatotoxicity resembling chronic hepatitis. J Gastroenterol Hepatol 2003; 18: 999–1000.


81 Adachi M, Saito H, Kobayashi H, et al. Hepatic injury in 12 patients taking the herbal weight loss aids Chaso or Onshido. Ann Intern Med 2003; 139: 488–92.


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86 Becker P, Maurer B, Schirmacher P, et al. Vitamin A-induced cholestatic hepatitis: a case report. Z Gastroenterol 2007; 45: 1063–6.


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90 Krasinski SD, Russell RM, Otradovec CL, et al. Relationship of vitamin A and vitamin E intake to fasting plasma retinol, retinol-binding protein, retinyl esters, carotene, alpha-tocopherol, and cholesterol among elderly people and young adults: increased plasma retinyl esters among vitamin A-supplement users. Am J Clin Nutr 1989; 49: 112–20.


91 Kowalski TE, Falestiny M, Furth E, Malet PF. Vitamin A hepatotoxicity: a cautionary note regarding 25.000 IU supplements. Am J Med 1994; 97: 523–8.


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  • FDA 101: Dietary Supplements


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    Cover page of PDF version of this article, including photo of dietary supplement capsules, pills, and tablets.
    On this page:
  • Talk with a Health Care Professional
  • How Are Supplements Regulated?
  • Are Supplements Safe?
  • Be a Safe and Informed Consumer
  • Report Problems

  • The law defines dietary supplements in part as products taken by mouth that contain a "dietary ingredient." Dietary ingredients include vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and herbs or botanicals, as well as other substances that can be used to supplement the diet.
    Dietary supplements come in many forms, including tablets, capsules, powders, energy bars, and liquids. These products are available in stores throughout the United States, as well as on the Internet. They are labeled as dietary supplements and include among others
    • vitamin and mineral products
    • "botanical" or herbal products—These come in many forms and may include plant materials, algae, macroscopic fungi, or a combination of these materials.
    • amino acid products—Amino acids are known as the building blocks of proteins and play a role in metabolism.
    • enzyme supplements—Enzymes are complex proteins that speed up biochemical reactions.
    People use dietary supplements for a wide assortment of reasons. Some seek to compensate for diets, medical conditions, or eating habits that limit the intake of essential vitamins and nutrients. Other people look to them to boost energy or to get a good night's sleep. Postmenopausal women consider using them to counter a sudden drop in estrogen levels.
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    Talk with a Health Care Professional

    The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) suggests that you consult with a health care professional before using any dietary supplement. Many supplements contain ingredients that have strong biological effects, and such products may not be safe in all people.
    If you have certain health conditions and take these products, you may be putting yourself at risk. Your health care professional can discuss with you whether it is safe for you to take a particular product and whether the product is appropriate for your needs. Here is some general advice:
    • Dietary supplements are not intended to treat, diagnose, cure, or alleviate the effects of diseases. They cannot completely prevent diseases, as some vaccines can. However, some supplements are useful in reducing the risk of certain diseases and are authorized to make label claims about these uses. For example, folic acid supplements may make a claim about reducing the risk of birth defects of the brain and spinal cord.
    • Using supplements improperly can be harmful. Taking a combination of supplements, using these products together with medicine, or substituting them in place of prescribed medicines could lead to harmful, even life-threatening, results.
    • Some supplements can have unwanted effects before, during, or after surgery. For example, bleeding is a potential side effect risk of garlic, ginkgo biloba, ginseng, and Vitamin E. In addition, kava and valerian act as sedatives and can increase the effects of anesthetics and other medications used during surgery. Before surgery, you should inform your health care professional about all the supplements you use.
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    How Are Supplements Regulated?

    You should know the following if you are considering using a dietary supplement.
    • Federal law requires that every dietary supplement be labeled as such, either with the term "dietary supplement" or with a term that substitutes a description of the product's dietary ingredient(s) for the word "dietary" (e.g., "herbal supplement" or "calcium supplement").
    • Federal law does not require dietary supplements to be proven safe to FDA's satisfaction before they are marketed.
    • For most claims made in the labeling of dietary supplements, the law does not require the manufacturer or seller to prove to FDA's satisfaction that the claim is accurate or truthful before it appears on the product.
    • In general, FDA's role with a dietary supplement product begins after the product enters the marketplace. That is usually the agency's first opportunity to take action against a product that presents a significant or unreasonable risk of illness or injury, or that is otherwise adulterated or misbranded.
    • Dietary supplement advertising, including ads broadcast on radio and television, falls under the jurisdiction of the Federal Trade Commission.
    • Once a dietary supplement is on the market, FDA has certain safety monitoring responsibilities. These include monitoring mandatory reporting of serious adverse events by dietary supplement firms and voluntary adverse event reporting by consumers and health care professionals. As its resources permit, FDA also reviews product labels and other product information, such as package inserts, accompanying literature, and Internet promotion.
    • Dietary supplement firms must report to FDA any serious adverse events that are reported to them by consumers or health care professionals.
    • Dietary supplement manufacturers do not have to get the agency's approval before producing or selling these products.
    • It is not legal to market a dietary supplement product as a treatment or cure for a specific disease, or to alleviate the symptoms of a disease.
    • There are limitations to FDA oversight of claims in dietary supplement labeling. For example, FDA reviews substantiation for claims as resources permit.
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    Are Supplements Safe?

    Many dietary supplements have clean safety histories. For example, millions of Americans responsibly consume multi-vitamins and experience no ill effects.
    Some dietary supplements have been shown to be beneficial for certain health conditions. For example, the use of folic acid supplements by women of childbearing age who may become pregnant reduces the risk of some birth defects.
    Another example is the crystalline form of vitamin B12, which is beneficial in people over age 50 who often have a reduced ability to absorb naturally occurring vitamin B12. But further study is needed for some other dietary supplements.
    Some supplements have had to be recalled because of proven or potential harmful effects. Reasons for these recalls include
    • microbiological, pesticide, and heavy metal contamination
    • absence of a dietary ingredient claimed to be in the product
    • the presence of more or less than the amount of the dietary ingredient claimed on the label
    In addition, unscrupulous manufacturers have tried to sell bogus products that should not be on the market at all.
    Before taking a dietary supplement, make sure that the supplement is safe for you and appropriate for the intended purpose.
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    Be a Safe and Informed Consumer

    • Let your health care professional advise you on sorting reliable information from questionable information.
    • Contact the manufacturer for information about the product you intend to use.
    • Be aware that some supplement ingredients, including nutrients and plant components, can be toxic. Also, some ingredients and products can be harmful when consumed in high amounts, when taken for a long time, or when used in combination with certain other drugs, substances, or foods.
    • Do not self-diagnose any health condition. Work with health care professionals to determine how best to achieve optimal health.
    • Do not substitute a dietary supplement for a prescription medicine or therapy, or for the variety of foods important to a healthful diet.
    • Do not assume that the term "natural" in relation to a product ensures that the product is wholesome or safe.
    • Be wary of hype and headlines. Sound health advice is generally based upon research over time, not a single study.
    • Learn to spot false claims. If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
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    Report Problems

    Adverse effects with dietary supplements should be reported to FDA as soon as possible. If you experience such an adverse effect, contact or see your health care professional immediately. Both of you are then encouraged to report this problem to FDA. For information on how to do this, go to www.fda.gov/FDAgov/Food/DietarySupplements/Alerts/ucm111110.htm.
    Adverse effects can also be reported to the product's manufacturer or distributor through the address or phone number listed on the product's label. Dietary supplement firms are required to forward reports they receive about serious adverse effects to FDA within 15 days.
    For a general, nonserious complaint or concern about dietary supplements, contact your local FDA Consumer Complaint Coordinator.
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