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Follow on Google News | Fraudulent Supplements in NY? Not Necessarily!Health advocacy group calls the AG’s herbal product testing procedures into question.
“The AG sent cease-and-desist orders on the basis of only one testing technology from only one laboratory, by a scientist who frankly lacks the requisite expertise. It should be obvious that the results are preliminary and require further substantiation before taking such a rash action,” DuBeau said. “More to the point, the tests used DNA barcoding, a technology that is rarely able to identify chemically complex herbal extracts, since in many commercial extraction processes, little or no DNA is extracted. At minimum, additional testing using microscopic analysis and time-honored chemical methods should have been conducted to confirm the initial results.” According to DuBeau, a number of factors make this type of testing problematic as well: an incomplete library of DNA sequences was used for comparison; fillers such as rice powder can produce mixed signals during the DNA sequencing process; and herbal products contain plant metabolites that may prevent accurate analysis. DuBeau was quick to point out that most of the news reports about this incident seem to paint all nutritional supplements in a negative light, when the vast majority of manufacturers subject their herbal products to rigorous and open scientific testing. At the same time, DuBeau said, recognizing the limitations of the particular tests used by the AG’s office is critical. “As a colleague pointed out, a dermatologist wouldn’t use a urine test to check for basal cell carcinoma. A botanist recognizes the drawbacks to using DNA barcoding exclusively to check for botanical identification. It doesn't tell the whole story. We just don’t have enough information about the attorney general’s study. It is hypocritical for the AG to demand transparency from supplement companies, as current Good Manufacturing Practices require, while not being transparent in his own testing procedures.” DuBeau’s comments echoed statements from the Council for Responsible Nutrition (http://www.crnusa.org/ ANH-USA recently published a list of nutritional supplement companies (http://www.anh- Always read the label. One way to compare ingredients in different products is by using the Dietary Supplements Labels Database (http://dietarysupplements.nlm.nih.gov/ Do your research or talk to a health professional. Some supplements interact with one another and with different medications— Talk to your supplement manufacturer. A reputable supplement manufacturer will always have a phone number where they can answer your questions about their ingredients, including where they come from and what safety procedures are in place. Check the FDA’s supplement website. This database (http://www.fda.gov/ # # # About the Alliance for Natural Health USA (ANH-USA) § http://anh-usa.org The Alliance for Natural Health USA is part of an international organization dedicated to promoting natural, sustainable healthcare through good science and good law. We protect the right of natural health practitioners to practice, and the right of consumers to choose the healthcare options and treatment modalities they prefer, including complementary and alternative medicine. As a membership-based organization, we unite consumers, practitioners, and industry to speak with a common voice and have worked since 1992 to shift the medical paradigm from an exclusive focus on surgery, drugs and other conventional techniques to an “integrative” End
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