Magic Power Coffee: potentially dangerous—not magical, FDA warns

June 22, 2010 | By More

Consumers should not use Magic Power Coffee, an instant coffee sold online as a dietary supplement for sexual enhancement, because it contains a potentially dangerous chemical similar to the active ingredient in the prescription drug Viagra, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration warns.

Here’s the text of the FDA’s Consumer’s Update about the product:

Magic Power Coffee: Potentially Dangerous—Not Magical

Consumers should not use an instant coffee being sold online as a dietary supplement for sexual enhancement, warns the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

The product, Magic Power Coffee, contains a potentially dangerous ingredient. The product is sold in a two-serving box as well as in a carton that contains six two-serving boxes.

FDA’s lab analysis determined that Magic Power Coffee contains a chemical similar to the active ingredient in the prescription drug Viagra to treat erectile dysfunction.

The chemical may interact with prescription drugs known as nitrates, including nitroglycerin, and cause dangerously low blood pressure.

Although Magic Power Coffee is labeled as an “all natural dietary supplement,” it can cause serious harm. Sexual enhancement products that claim to work as well as prescription products are likely to expose consumers to unpredictable risks and the potential for injury or even death.

Advice for Consumers

  • Stop using Magic Power Coffee immediately.
  • If you have experienced any bad side effects from Magic Power Coffee or any sexual enhancement products, talk to a health care professional.

This article appears on FDA’s Consumer Updates page, which features the latest on all FDA-regulated products.

To learn more:

  • Read a 2009 FDA article on other erectile dysfunction treatments sold online below
  • Watch this FDA video:

Hidden Risks of Erectile Dysfunction “Treatments” Sold Online

Men looking online for “dietary supplements” to treat erectile dysfunction (ED) or enhance their sexual performance should beware: these products may contain prescription drugs or other undisclosed ingredients that can be harmful.

“The number of these problematic products available on the Internet appears to be increasing,” says Michael Levy, director of the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Division of New Drugs and Labeling Compliance. The division is part of the Office of Compliance (OOC) in the agency’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER).

Many consumers perceive these products as completely safe because they are often sold with labeling, suggesting that they are all-natural alternatives to prescription drug products that have been approved by FDA for treating ED.

But these products may be laced with potentially hazardous ingredients that aren’t noted on the label.

Since 2004, FDA has become aware of several such “dietary supplements”

Viagra Ingredient Found

Working with other FDA components, the division’s Internet and Health Fraud Team led an Internet survey in which more than one-third of purchased “dietary supplements” claiming to spur sexual enhancement or treat ED contained undisclosed prescription drug ingredients or similar substances.

Six of the 17 products contained sildenafil (the active ingredient in Viagra) or a substance similar to either sildenafil or vardenafil. Vardenafil is the active ingredient in Levitra, another FDA-approved prescription drug that treats ED.

Mark Hirsch, a medical team Leader in CDER’s Division of Reproductive and Urologic Products, says this undisclosed presence of prescription drug ingredients—and similar compounds known as analogs of the drugs—can lead to serious side effects in users.

Dangerous Interactions

“These products may interact in dangerous ways with drugs that a consumer is already taking,” Hirsch says. For example, taking sildenafil in addition to certain prescription drugs containing nitrates may lower blood pressure to an unsafe level.

People with diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or heart disease are often prescribed drugs containing nitrates, and men with these conditions commonly suffer from ED, Hirsch says. “Those are factors that doctors consider when prescribing approved ED treatments.”

Preventive Measures

Levy says FDA has determined that many of these products or their active ingredients are imported into the United States from other countries.
“FDA is working closely with U.S. Customs and Border Protection to develop a more effective network to successfully screen and stop these shipments from entering U.S. commerce,” says Huascar Batista, team leader of OOC’s Import-Export Team.

“FDA uses all of its enforcement powers—including warning letters, seizures, injunctions, import alerts, and criminal prosecution—to protect consumers against these products,” says Levy. Follow-up investigations continue to identify multiple problem products, resulting in additional import alerts, recalls, and seizure actions.

In 2008, U.S. Marshals, at FDA’s request, seized products from two different firms that contained undeclared active ingredients found in FDA-approved prescription drugs for ED, or similar substances.

In April 2008, they seized more than 14,000 dosages of products known as Shangai Regular, Shangai Ultra, Super Shangai, Naturalë Super Plus, and Lady Shangai. The seized products, valued at more than $100,000, originated in China and were packaged and distributed by Shangai Distributors Inc. of Coamo, Puerto Rico.

In July 2008, the Marshals seized specific lots of illegal Xiadafil VIP tablets distributed by SEI Pharmaceuticals Inc. (SEI) of Miami, Fla. The total worth of the seized tablets neared $74,000.

In both cases, the firms prompted FDA enforcement by failing to act after being notified of the potential adverse health risks posed by the products.

FDA is also evaluating innovative ways to educate consumers about the risks of buying such sexual enhancement products and other drugs online.

Online Products to Avoid

Since 2004, FDA has identified several products sold online as so-called “dietary supplements” for treating erectile dysfunction and enhancing sexual performance. These products have contained potentially harmful, undeclared ingredients. Included among them are

  • Actra-Rx
  • Actra-Sx
  • Libidus
  • Nasutra
  • Neophase
  • Vigor-25
  • Yilishen
  • Zimaxx
  • 4EVERON
  • Liviro3
  • Lycium Barbarum L.
  • Adam Free
  • Rhino V Max
  • V.Max
  • True Man
  • Energy Max
  • HS Joy of Love
  • NaturalUp
  • Blue Steel
  • Erextra
  • Super Shangai
  • Strong Testis
  • Shangai Ultra
  • Shangai Ultra X
  • Lady Shangai
  • Shangai Regular, also marketed as Shangai Chaojimengnan
  • Hero
  • Naturalë Super Plus
  • Xiadafil VIP tablets (Lots 6K029 and 6K209-SEI only)

This article appears on FDA’s Consumer Updates page, which features the latest on all FDA-regulated products.

Updated: February 21, 2009

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Category: Drugs & Medicines, FDA Advice, Male Reproductive System, Vitamins & Supplements

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