+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 2 of 2
nicotine polacrilex in Campaigning; Does any person know if the nicotine the carts contain have this in them or just medicinal grade Nicotine? Might ...
  1. #1
    Forum Supplier ECF Veteran billster88's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    canada
    Posts
    104

    Question nicotine polacrilex

    Does any person know if the nicotine the carts contain have this in them or just medicinal grade Nicotine? Might make a big difference in them outlawing it..here a paste from something a few years ago on the nico water:....

    Nicotine-Laced Water Is a Drug, F.D.A. Rules

    *

    By SHERRI DAY
    Published: July 3, 2002

    Federal regulators said yesterday that nicotine-laced bottled water, which is being marketed as a dietary supplement, is an unapproved drug and cannot be sold in the United States without federal clearance.

    The product, Nico Water, fell squarely in the middle of the debate about whether substances that contain nicotine, but do not make drug claims, should be classified as dietary supplements or drugs. In April, the Food and Drug Administration ordered nicotine lollipops and nicotine lip balm off the market.

    ''This product clearly cannot be marketed as a dietary supplement because it contains ingredients that do not meet the definition of a dietary supplement,'' said David J. Horowitz, the F.D.A.'s head of drug compliance. ''Secondly, the product is marketed as a smoking cessation product, which rendered the product an unapproved drug under the law.''

    Mr. Horowitz said products could not be considered dietary supplements if they contained an ingredient that is already in an approved drug. The active ingredient in Nico Water is nicotine polacrilex, the same form of nicotine that the F.D.A. has approved for use as a drug in the nicotine patch and in nicotine gum.

  2. Advertisement
  3. #2
    Ultra Member ECF Veteran dc2k08's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    .ie
    Posts
    1,758

    Default

    no idea mate and worth looking into. by all rights these things should have been banned already as the water and pops were reined in so quickly. it surprises me that the FDA are shrugging their shoulders. perhaps the polacrilex is a factor.

+ Reply to Thread

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

SEO by vBSEO