Greek Ruins

By Peter Pitts on June 2, 2008 – 7:03 am

According to the FDA, consumers who thought they were purchasing sleep aids, antidepressants and other drugs over the Internet instead were shipped a powerful antipsychotic, sending some unwitting victims to the emergency room.

The Food and Drug Administration said a number of consumers took the schizophrenia drug, haloperidol, after being shipped what they thought were a variety of different pills, including Ambien, a sleep aid, and the anti-anxiety medications Xanax and Ativan. Others thought they were getting the antidepressant Lexapro.

Preliminary analysis of the pills, packaged in plain plastic bags and mailed in envelopes bearing Greek postmarks, suggest they contain haloperidol. The FDA said it had reports of several consumers seeking emergency medical treatment for symptoms such as difficulty in breathing, muscle spasms and muscle stiffness after taking the pills.

The FDA used the occasion to remind consumers of the possible dangers of buying prescription drugs on the Web.

The FDA posted images of the suspect pills and their shipping packages on its Web site to help consumers identify any suspect product they may have ordered.

Consumers apparently ordered the drugs through a variety of commercial Web sites. The FDA said it was investigating.

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Posted in Counterfeit Drugs |

One Comment to “Greek Ruins”

  1. Allan Coukell Says:

    It is safe to say it is never a good idea to buy prescription medication from a spam emailer or website advertising “Ambien, Xanax, Lexapro, and Ativan,” as happened in this case. Nor should you take the pills if they arrive in a hand-lettered envelope with a personal name in Greece as the return address, as happened in this case. (The Feb 2007 FDA release Peter references is here: http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/NEWS/2007/NEW01564.html ) If it looks like a scam, it probably is.

    In this case, a Greek national - one GEORGIOS XYDEAS - was arrested and charged in US District Court in Denver: http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/co/press_releases/2008/April08/4_4_08.html

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