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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> not cause adverse
effects, the increasing number of caffeinated products on the market, including
drinks, could mean more adverse health effects for children.Last November,
the FDA said it had received 92 reports over four years that
cited illnesses, hospitalizations and deaths after consumption of an energy
shot marketed as 5-Hour Energy. The FDA said it had also received
reports that cited the highly caffeinated Monster Energy Drink in several
deaths.Agency officials said then that the reports to the FDA from consumers,
doctors and others don't necessarily prove that the drinks caused the deaths
or injuries but said they were investigating each one. In February, FDA
Commissioner Margaret Hamburg again stressed that reports to the agency
of adverse events related to energy drinks did not necessarily suggest a
causal effect.FDA officials said they would take action if they could link
the deaths to consumption of the energy drinks, including forcing the companies
to take the products off the market.In 2010, the agency forced manufacturers
of alcoholic caffeinated beverages to cease production of those drinks.
The agency said the combination of caffeine and alcohol could lead to
a "wide-awake drunk" and has led to alcohol poisoning, car accidents and
assaults.
For people seeking an energy boost, companies are increasing their offerings
of foods with added caffeine. A new caffeinated gum may have gone
too far.The Food and Drug Administration said Monday that it will investigate
the safety of added caffeine and its effects on children and adolescents.
The agency made the announcement just as Wrigley was rolling out Alert
Energy Gum, a new product that includes as much caffeine as a
half a cup of coffee in one piece and promises "the right
energy, right now."Michael Taylor, FDA's deputy commissioner of foods, indicated
that the proliferation of new foods with caffeine added -- especially the
gum, which he equates to "four cups of coffee in your pocket"
-- may even prompt the FDA to look closer at the way
all food ingredients are regulated.The agency is already investigating the
safety of energy drinks and energy shots, prompted by consumer reports of
illness and death.Taylor said Monday that the only time FDA explicitly approved
the added use of caffeine in a food or drink was in
the 1950s for colas. The current proliferation of caffeine added to foods
is "beyond anything FDA envisioned," Taylor said."It is disturbing," Taylor
told The Associated Press. "We're concerned about whether they have been
adequately evaluated."Caffeine has the regulatory classification of "generally
recognized as safe," or GRAS, which means manufacturers can add it to
products and then determine on their own whether th
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