| 15 Octobre 2013
An  international team of scientists have identified potentially dangerous  amounts of methamphetamine analog in the workout supplement Craze,  a product widely sold across the U.S. and online. The study, published  in Drug  Testing and Analysis, was prompted by a spate of failed athletic drug tests. The results reveal the presence of methamphetamine analog N,α-  DEPEA, which has not been safely tested for human consumption, in three samples.  “In  recent years banned and untested drugs have been found in hundreds of  dietary supplements. We began our study of Craze after several  athletes failed urine drug tests because of a new methamphetamine  analog,” said lead author Dr. Pieter Cohen, of Harvard Medical School,  U.S.A.  A  workout supplement marketed as a ‘performance fuel’, Craze is  manufactured by Driven Sports, Inc., and is sold in stores across the  United States and internationally via body supplement websites.  The  supplement is labeled as containing the compound  N,N-diethyl-phenylethylamine (N,N-DEPEA), claiming it is derived from  endangered  dendrobium orchids. However, while there is no proof that this compound  is found within orchids, it is also structurally similar to the  methamphetamine  analog N,α-diethylphenylethylamine (N,α-DEPEA), a banned substance.  The  team analyzed three samples of Craze for traces of N,α-DEPEA. The first  sample was brought from a mainstream retailer in the U.S.,  while the second and third samples were ordered from online retailers in  the U.S. and Holland.  The  team used ultra-high performance liquid chromatography to detect the  presence of N,α-DEPEA.  The first two samples were analyzed by  NSF International, while the third was tested at the Netherland’s  National Institute for Public Health. The findings were independently  corroborated by the  Korean Forensic Service, which confirmed the presence of N,α-DEPEA in  two further samples of Craze in a parallel investigation.  “We  identified a potentially dangerous designer drug in three separate  samples of this widely available dietary supplement,” said Cohen. “The  tests revealed quantities of N,α-DEPEA of over 20mg per serving, which  strongly suggests that this is not an accidental contamination from the  manufacturing process.”  As  a structural analog of methamphetamine, N,α-DEPEA , may have stimulant  and addictive qualities; however, it has never been studied  in humans and its adverse effects remain unknown.  The  product labeling claims that Craze contains several organic compounds,  known as phenylethylamines. However, phenylethylamines are a very  broad category of chemicals which range from harmless compounds found in  chocolate to synthetically produced illegal drugs.  “The  phenylethylamine we identified in Craze, N,α-DEPEA, is not listed on  the labeling and it has not been previously identified as a  derivative of dendrobium orchids,” said Cohen.  “If  these findings are confirmed by regulatory authorities, the FDA (The  U.S. Food and Drug Administration) must take action to warn  consumers and to remove supplements containing N,α-DEPEA from sale,”  concluded Cohen. “Our fear is that the federal shutdown may delay this,  resulting  in potentially dangerous supplements remaining widely available.” 
Danger of U.S. Federal Shutdown Preventing FDA Ban, Scientists Warn