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Healthy Skepticism Library item: 2663

Warning: This library includes all items relevant to health product marketing that we are aware of regardless of quality. Often we do not agree with all or part of the contents.

 

Publication type: news

Doctors Told To Stop Using Acid Reflux Treatment
Associated Press ( on NBCSandiego.com ) 2005 Oct 18
http://web.archive.org/web/20051020122515/http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/5115101/detail.html

Keywords:
Enteryx acid reflux FDA


Notes:

Ralph Faggotter’s Comments:
This episode highlights the dangers inherent in any medical prodedure. You not only have to worry about what is being injected but who is injecting it and whether or not there might be some safer alternative.
It’s too late to start asking these questions when the ‘spongy material’ is already floating merrily down your aorta.


Full text:

Doctors Told To Stop Using Acid Reflux Treatment

POSTED: 5:58 am PDT October 18, 2005

WASHINGTON — The government is warning doctors to stop using Enteryx, an injection used to treat acid reflux disease, saying it has been connected to serious health problems and, in at least one case, a death.

Many of the problems with Enteryx have occurred when it is injected imprecisely, missing its intended destination and passing through the wall of the esophagus, sometimes entering other internal organs or the bloodstream, risking blockage of blood vessels, the Food and Drug Administration said. Doctors have not always immediately detected a faulty injection.

Enteryx is injected as a liquid that solidifies into a spongy material that cannot be removed. When it is injected properly, it strengthens the lower esophagus, helping prevent stomach acid from entering it and causing pain.

The FDA did not provide specific numbers on the number of problems that have been discovered. Manufacturer Boston Scientific issued a recall on Sept. 23 but blamed the problems entirely on faulty injection technique.

The FDA also cited at least two instances in which Enteryx was injected properly but patients still developed problems.

The death was blamed on Enteryx being injected into the wall of the aorta.

The FDA said people who received the injection and are suffering from chest, stomach or side pain, flu-like symptoms, including fever, cough or shortness of breath, or fainting spells should contact their doctor immediately.

Boston Scientific is advising people who have received an Enteryx injection in the last 30 days to see their doctor for a follow-up, but the FDA said some problems associated with the injection have occurred seven weeks later.

 

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As an advertising man, I can assure you that advertising which does not work does not continue to run. If experience did not show beyond doubt that the great majority of doctors are splendidly responsive to current [prescription drug] advertising, new techniques would be devised in short order. And if, indeed, candor, accuracy, scientific completeness, and a permanent ban on cartoons came to be essential for the successful promotion of [prescription] drugs, advertising would have no choice but to comply.
- Pierre R. Garai (advertising executive) 1963