"Nano-silver" Is A Pesticide - US Warns… The Nigerian Ebola Experimental Drug
The
U.S. Food and Drug Administration said on Thursday it has become aware of
products being sold online that fraudulently claim to prevent or treat Ebola.
The
FDA's warning comes on the heels of comments by Nigeria's top health official,
Onyebuchi Chukwu, who reportedly said earlier Thursday that eight Ebola
patients in Lagos, the country's capital, will receive an experimental
treatment called nano-silver.
Erica
Jefferson, a spokeswoman for the FDA, said she could not provide any
information about the product referenced by the Nigerians.The
FDA did not specify any products in its warning.
Silver
has been used as an antibacterial for centuries. Tiny silver particles known as
nano-silver have controversially been incorporated into a variety of consumer
products such as socks and bedding to help block odors caused by bacteria and
mold.
The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers nano-silver a pesticide.
Manufacturers of products that contain it must register them with the agency.
Nano-silver
is also sometimes sold online as a dietary supplement even though Danish
researchers found in a recent study that nano-silver can penetrate and damage
cells.
The
FDA regulates dietary supplements and said in its statement that "by law,
dietary supplements cannot claim to prevent or cure disease."
The
agency said it had received consumer complaints about the Ebola claims.
"Individuals
promoting these unapproved and fraudulent products must take immediate action
to correct or remove these claims or face potential FDA action," the
agency said.
The
Ebola outbreak ravaging West Africa has claimed 1,069 lives so far. Most have
been in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia. Nigeria has confirmed 10 cases of the
disease and four deaths.
[Reuters]
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