While researchers and scientists investigate the cause of
our diabetes, obesity, asthma and ADHD epidemics, they should ask why the FDA
approved a livestock drug banned in 160 nations and responsible for
hyperactivity, muscle breakdown and 10 percent mortality in pigs, according to
angry farmers who phoned the manufacturer.
The beta agonist ractopamine, a repartitioning agent that
increases protein synthesis, was recruited for livestock use when researchers
found the drug, used in asthma, made mice more muscular says Beef magazine.
But unlike the growth promoting antibiotics and hormones
used in livestock which are withdrawn as the animal nears slaughter,
ractopamine is started as the animal
nears slaughter.
As much as 20 percent of Paylean, given to pigs for their
last 28 days; Optaflexx, given to cattle their last 28 to 42 days and Tomax,
given to turkeys their last seven to 14 days, remains in consumer meat says
author and well known veterinarian Michael W. Fox.
Though banned in Europe, Taiwan and China -- more than 1,700
people were �poisoned� from eating Paylean-fed pigs since 1998, says the
Sichuan Pork Trade Chamber of Commerce -- ractopamine is used in 45 percent of
US pigs, says Elanco Animal Health which manufactures all three products.
How does a drug marked, �Not
for use in humans. Individuals with cardiovascular disease should exercise
special caution to avoid exposure. Use protective clothing, impervious gloves,
protective eye wear, and a NIOSH-approved dust mask� become �safe� in human
food? With no washout period?
The same way Elanco�s other two blockbusters, Stilbosol
(diethylstilbestrol or DES), now withdrawn, and Posilac or bovine growth
hormone (rBST), bought from Monsanto in 2008, became part of the nation�s food
supply: shameless corporate lobbying. A third of meetings on the Food Safety
and Inspection Service�s public calendar in January 2009 were with Elanco, a
division of Eli Lilly -- or about ractopamine.
In fact, in 2002, three years after Paylean�s approval, the
FDA�s
Center for Veterinary Medicine�s Office of
Surveillance and Compliance accused Elanco of withholding information about �safety
and effectiveness� and �adverse animal drug experiences� upon which
ractopamine was approved, in a 14-page warning letter.
�Our representatives requested a complete and accurate list
of all your GLP [Good Laboratory Practices] studies involving Paylean� (Ractopamine
hydrochloride), including their current status as well as the names of the
respective study monitors. In response, your firm supplied to our
representatives multiple lists which differed in the names of the studies and
their status. In addition, your firm could not locate or identify documents
pertaining to some of the studies. This situation was somewhat confusing and
created unneeded delays for our representatives,� wrote Gloria J. Dunnavan,
Director Division of Compliance.
Where was mention of the farmer phone calls to Elanco
reporting, �hyperactivity,� �dying animals,� �downer pigs� and �tying up� and �stress�
syndromes, asks the FDA letter. Where was the log of phone calls that included
farmers saying, �Animals are down and shaking,� and �pig vomiting after eating
feed with Paylean�?
But, not to worry. Despite ractopamine�s dangers and the
falsified approval documents, the FDA approved ractopamine the following year
for cattle and, last year, for turkeys.
According to Temple Grandin, professor of Animal Science at
Colorado State University, the �indiscriminant use of Paylean (ractopamine) has
contributed to an increase in downer non-ambulatory pigs,� and pigs that �are
extremely difficult to move and drive.� In Holsteins, ractopamine is known for
causing hoof problems, says Grandin and feedlot managers report the �outer
shell of the hoof fell off� on a related beta agonist drug, zilpateral.
An article in the 2003 Journal of Animal Science confirms
that �ractopamine does affect the behavior, heart rate and catecholamine
profile of finishing pigs and making them more difficult to handle and
potentially more susceptible to handling and transport stress.�
Nor can we overlook the effects of �adding these drugs to
waterways or well water supplies -- via contaminated animal feed and manure
runoff -- when this class of drugs is so important in treating children with
asthma,� says David Wallinga, MD of the Institute for Agriculture and Trade
Policy.
The FDA�s approval of a drug for food that requires
impervious gloves and a mask just to handle
is reminiscent of the bovine growth hormone debacle.
Like rBST, ractopamine increases profits despite greater
livestock death and disability because a treated animal does the work of two in
a macabre version of economies of scale.
Like rBST, food consumers are metabolic, neurological and
carcinogen guinea pigs so that agribusiness can make a profit.
And like rBST, �Mothers Of Growing Children� was not marked
as a visiting group on the Food Safety and Inspection Service�s public calendar
next to the agricultural lobbyists.
Martha Rosenberg is a Chicago
columnist/cartoonist who writes about public health. She may be reached at martharosenberg@sbcglobal.net.