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Energy drinks under fire as FDA probes caffeine content

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(MCT) — PHILADELPHIA—With a 3:30 p.m. meeting for his group design project, a class from 6 to 9 p.m. and a mechanical engineering exam the next day, Kevin Capps was feeling a workload crunch.

So the skateboard-toting Drexel University senior stopped by a Wawa store Wednesday morning to pick up some energy in a can: 12 ounces of Red Bull.

Was he risking his health?

Almost certainly not, say health experts. The amount of caffeine in one 12-ounce can of the popular beverage — 114 milligrams — is about the same as that in a typical cup of coffee.

Yet so-called energy drinks have come under increasing scrutiny this week after the Food and Drug Administration acknowledged it was looking into reports that five people had died after drinking the Monster Energy brand of beverages. And on Thursday, Consumer Reports disclosed the results of lab tests showing that some of the drinks contain at least 20 percent more caffeine than advertised, while others do not list the amount on their labels.

Several brands contained about 200 milligrams per serving, even when the “serving” was little more than a mouthful, the magazine reported. Tops among 27 products tested was a 1.9-ounce energy “shot,” called 5-hour Energy Extra Strength, containing 242 milligrams of caffeine.

In ordinary circumstances and in healthy people, a much larger amount of caffeine is needed to induce serious consequences such as death, said Adam Rowden, operations director for the emergency department at Einstein Medical Center in North Philadelphia. The danger zone is 5 grams, he said — equivalent to swilling 20 of the most caffeine-intense beverages.

But someone with an underlying health problem, such as a heart condition or a tendency to have seizures, could get in trouble with much less, said Rowden, also a consulting toxicologist for the poison control center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

Those competing in strenuous sports also should take it in moderation, says the International Marathon Medical Directors Association. The group recommends no more than 200 milligrams on the day of a race of 10 kilometers or more.

Caffeine is a stimulant that increases heart rate and blood pressure. Monster, based in California, denied any suggestion that its products were unsafe.

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