A phony press release at General Mills Inc. which could have caused a stock decline with reports that President Obama had ordered a big investigation of the company after several food product recalls. The investigation was fabricated, say reports. Although the exact goal still isn’t clear, reports say, the general idea behind the report would be to manipulate the stock of the company. The headline reportedly read: “Obama Orders Full Investigation of General Mills Supply Chain Following Food Recalls.”…
Reports say hundreds of personal injury attorneys are beginning preliminary preparations toward litigation against makers of Darvon and Darvocet, or Xanodyne Pharmaceuticals Inc. The drugs, which were manufactured for opoid pain relief, reportedly have a reaction in many users, including life-threatening arrhythmic cardiac events. The product Propoxyphene was first sold as Darvon in the late ’50s, with a newer medicine, Darvocet, a combination drug made with propoxyphene and acetaminophen, now offered as an alternative. But late last year the U.S….
A Class-I recall was recently announced by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration pertaining to the ev3 NanoCross .014″ PTA Dilation Catheter, which has been reported to have the potential to crack or break. The Class I recall, which is the most serious type of recall of products believed to pose a serious health consequence, was issued for the catheter because it has shown a potential for cracking or breaking. Should that happen, it could cause potential embolization of catheter…
Darvon, and the related drug Darvocet, may have been found to increase the risk of heart attacks and bone fractures in elderly arthritis patients, reports from a new study finds. Reports say that painkillers like Oxycontin, Darvon and Darvocet increase the risk of death by 87-percent, as compared to drugs such as Ibuprofen. The reported study, in which some 12000 people participated, says that those patients treated with narcotic painkillers known as opiods were linked to a 68 percent increase…
Bayer Healthcare’s popular birth control pills Yaz and Yasmin are under fire for possible links to an increase in blood clots, reports say. Bayer cites two studies it commissioned as proof that the drugs are safe, but other studies have found that contraceptives similar to Yaz and Yasmin increase the risk of blood clots more than other types of birth control pills. Yasmin and Yaz are reportedly made with a synthetic progestin called drospirenone. But the synthetic progestin reportedly has…