The Food and Drug Administration has long been targeting “natural” sexual enhancement products that actually contain prescription drugs.
The owner of a Nevada brothel where former basketball star Lamar Odom collapsed Tuesday said he’d been taking “lots of” so-called “herbal Viagra.”
It might be impossible to confirm what, if anything, Odom might have taken and whether it caused his symptoms. But FDA’s been worried about such products for years, sending out dozens of notices.
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With names like “Full Throttle On Demand’, “3 Hard Knights” and “Ninja Mojo”, it’s clear what they are promising. And some of them can deliver more than what’s on the label, according to FDA. Many contain sildenafil, the active ingredient in Viagra, even though it’s not listed on the label, or the structurally similar sulfoaildenafil.
“This undeclared ingredient may interact with nitrates, which are found in some prescription drugs, such as nitroglycerin. This interaction may lower blood pressure to dangerous levels. Men with diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or heart disease often take prescription drugs that contain nitrates,” the FDA warns.
But if the products are labeled as natural, and if the drug itself isn’t even on the label, men may not know of the risk.








