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FDA Warns Consumers on Sexual Enhancement Products, I.E., Stiff Nights

SILVER SPRING, Md. — The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers that Stiff Nights, a product marketed as a dietary supplement for sexual enhancement, contains an ingredient that can dangerously lower blood pressure and is illegal.

Over the past several years, the FDA has found many products marketed as
“dietary supplements” for sexual enhancement that contain undeclared active
ingredients of FDA-approved drugs, analogs of approved drugs and other
compounds that do not qualify as “dietary ingredients.” The FDA has issued
multiple alerts about these contaminated dietary supplements.

Consumers and health care professionals should be aware of this problem and
the health hazard it presents. Sexual enhancement products that claim to work as well as prescription products are likely to contain a contaminant. Use of such products exposes consumers to unpredictable risk and the potential for injury or even death.

In the case of Stiff Nights, following a consumer complaint, the FDA
determined that the product contains sulfoaildenafil. This is a chemical
similar to sildenafil, the active ingredient in Viagra. Sulfoaildenafil may
interact with prescription drugs known as nitrates, including nitroglycerin, and cause dangerously low blood pressure.

The product is distributed on Internet sites and at retail stores by
Impulsaria LLC of Grand Rapids, Mich. It is sold in bottles containing 6, 12, or 30 red capsules or in blister packs containing one or two capsules.

“Because this product is labeled as an ‘all natural dietary supplement,’
consumers may assume it is harmless and poses no health risk,” said Deborah M. Autor, director of FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Office of Compliance. “In fact, this product is illegally marketed and can cause serious complications.”

The FDA advises consumers who have experienced any adverse events from sexual enhancement products to consult a health care professional. Consumers and health care professionals should report adverse events to the FDA’s MedWatch program at 800-FDA-1088 or online at www.fda.gov/medwatch/report.htm.

The FDA remains committed to stopping the illegal marketing of unapproved
drugs and will continue to protect the public with vigorous law enforcement
and criminal prosecution of violators.

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