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You might want to
think twice about using an appetite suppressant to quickly shed
a few pounds off your widening waist or fatty thighs. A new study
has found that a key ingredient in over-the-counter diet pills can
increase the risk of stroke in women. Based on the investigation
of stroke patients by the Yale University School of Medicine, a
US Food and Drug Administration advisory panel has recommended that
phenylpropanolamine (PPA) be removed from over-the-counter appetite
suppressants and cold medicines. In light of the advisory panel's
vote on Oct. 19, the federal agency is evaluating whether PPA should
be discontinued as an active ingredient in over-the-counter medication.
The Yale University
study is not the first time that health experts and nutritionists
have questioned the safety of PPA, the only approved active ingredient
in over-the-counter appetite suppressants. Diet pills containing
PPA can cause fatigue, insomnia, mood changes, irritability, high
blood pressure, abnormal heart rhythm, heart and kidney damage,
and seizures, says nutritionist Frances Berg, publisher of the Healthy
Weight Journal and an adjunct professor at the University of North
Dakota School of Medicine.
PPA and stroke risks
Products containing
PPA should either be sold as prescription medication, or made available
only to adults, Berg says. "There's been evidence for years
and years about the health risks of PPA,'' Berg says. "Even
when used correctly, it can cause dangerous reactions.''
Products with PPA
are responsible for an estimated 200 to 500 strokes each year in
people ages 18-49, primarily women and first-time users of the drug,
according to the FDA's staff analysis of the Yale University study.
The five-year investigation of 702 stroke patients ages 18-49 found
that the risk of hemorrhagic stroke (bleeding in the brain) was
15 times higher in women who took appetite suppressants in the three
days before the stroke.
The Consumer Healthcare
Products Association (CHPA), a trade group that represents makers
of nonprescription drugs and the financial sponsor of the Yale University
study, said the results showed no conclusive proof that PPA is linked
to strokes. The CHPA says products containing PPA are safe and effective
when used according to instructions on the packaging label.
Do diet pills work?
Besides being risky
to your health, diet pills are not a permanent solution to controlling
your weight, says Berg. The members of the FDA advisory committee
agree, commenting at their recent meeting that almost all consumers
who take appetite suppressants eventually regain the pounds they
shed, FDA spokesman Jason Brodsky says.
"People should
not be using these appetite suppressants," Berg says. "Lose-weight-fast
gimmicks and schemes have not helped anyone. Often a person will
regain more than they lost.''
Diet pills have gained
popularity among teenage girls, who often equate being fat to being
a failure in today's weight-obsessed culture, Berg writes in her
book, Afraid to Eat: Children and Teens in Weight Crisis. In a study
of Michigan State University students, one in five said they started
using diet pills between ages 12-16, and nearly half of the women
in the study group had tried a dietary drug, according to Berg.
None consulted a doctor before trying an over-the-counter weight-loss
remedy, and many took more than the recommended daily dosage.
Controlling your
weight safely
The lure of diet
pills comes at a time when more Americans than ever are overweight.
Being overweight - as are 55 percent of adults and 11 percent of
children ages 6-17 - can lead to serious health problems, such as
heart disease and diabetes. An all-time high of 16 million Americans
have diabetes, and the rate of diagnosed cases is expected to continue
climbing because Americans are getting heavier each year, says the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
According to the
National Institutes of Health (NIH), the most successful weight-loss
strategies include calorie reduction combined with increased physical
activity and behavior-modification therapy designed to improve eating
and exercise habits. Here are some suggestions on what you and your
family can do to lose weight, and keep it off, without resorting
to appetite suppressants:
Seek your doctor's
advice before launching into any weight-loss program, or taking
any over-the-counter diet pill or supplement. Be wary of fad diets
and rapid weight-loss programs - they may provide dramatic short-term
results but can be hazardous to your long-term health. On any non-medically
supervised weight-loss program, women should consume at least 1,200
calories a day and men at least 1,600 per day, according to health
experts at Johns Hopkins University. If you consume too few calories,
your body will go into starvation mode, your Metabolism will slow
down in order to store fat, and weight loss will become even more
difficult.
Set realistic weight-loss goals, such as 1 to 2 pounds a week or
8 pounds a month. And don't give up just because you've reached
a plateau, or binged over the weekend.
Exercise. According
to the NIH, 25 percent of adults and 14 percent of young people
(ages 12-21) claim they do no physical activity during their leisure
time. If your schedule seems too jammed for exercise, be willing
to give up something else. But if you've been sedentary for years,
doing too much too soon can lead to burnout and injuries. Try to
get in a total of at least 150 minutes of walking or other physical
activity per week.
Know what you're eating, and how much. Try to keep your daily fat
intake to less than 30 percent of your total daily calories. But
remember that reducing dietary fat alone without reducing calories
will not produce weight loss. Some fat-free food products are high
in sugar and actually contain more calories than their fat-containing
counterparts. So it's important to practice portion control, and
eat a diet rich in vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and beans.
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