
Nigerian death toll rises in tainted formula case
Source of Article: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hZgOAQLjyJXvAHPxo7Gs1LEem2bQD94QOE8G0 When the outbreak was first reported last week, 25 children were reported
dead. The deadly agent entered the production process for "My Pikin Baby Teething Mixture" when an official of the
Lagos-based maker procured a tainted ingredient from an unregistered chemical
dealer in a sprawling slum near the city's main dump, the National Agency for
Food, Drug Administration and Control said. About 10 gallons (40 liters) of the deadly chemical were delivered in an
unsealed, unlabeled plastic container, according to the agency, which is
known by the acronym Nafdac. Several officials of the pharmaceutical maker, Barewa
Pharmaceuticals Ltd., were under arrest along with several other suspects
accused of helping provide the tainted ingredient. A phone number listed for the company was not working Tuesday and
officials couldn't be immediately reached for comment. The food and drug agency said the first sickened child was taken for treatment
on Nov. 19, in The drug was ordered pulled from shelves across the country, and the
agency said Tuesday it had recovered more than 2,000 bottles of the teething
formula, including 255 bottles from the tainted batch. It didn't say how many
bottles of the bad formula existed. The agency said it was flying in 100 doses of an antidote from The afflicted children were stricken with fever, convulsions, diarrhea,
vomiting and were unable to urinate after being given the product, which
contained diethylene glycol. The agency said Barewa Pharmaceuticals appears
to have been told it was purchasing propylene glycol, a normal ingredient in
the teething formula. Nafdac said the pharmaceutical company had
always bought that ingredient through approved channels before. It didn't say
why the officials had gone to a local market in the instance that led to the
rash of infant deaths. Diethylene glycol is commonly found in
antifreeze and brake fluid and sometimes used illegally as a cheaper
alternative to glycerin, which thickens toothpaste. Exposure can cause kidney
and liver damage. The contaminant has been implicated in poisoning cases around the world,
including in The food and drug administration has drawn plaudits from Nigerians in
recent years for having cut down on counterfeit or dangerous medicines. |
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