OTTAWA,
ON, June 28, 2024 /CNW/ -
Summary
- Product: Festal Plus tablets (labelled in
Korean)
- Issue: Health products – Product safety;
Unauthorized product
- What to do: Do not use this product. Consult a
health care professional if you have used this product and have
health concerns. Read product labels to verify that health products
have been authorized for sale by Health Canada. Only buy
prescription drugs from licensed pharmacies. Return products to
your local pharmacy for proper disposal.
Images
Affected products
Product
|
Health
risk
|
Festal Plus
tablets
|
Labelled (in Korean) to
contain ursodiol
|
Issue
Health Canada is warning
consumers not to use unauthorized Festal Plus tablets seized from
GD Health Town, in Coquitlam (329
North Road #215), B.C., because the product is labelled to contain
a prescription drug (ursodiol) and may pose serious health
risks.
The unauthorized product is promoted for use in adults and
children eight years of age and older who have gastrointestinal
problems to help digest food; however, ursodiol is a prescription
drug in Canada and is only
authorized for the treatment of certain liver diseases.
Selling unauthorized health products in Canada is illegal. Unauthorized health
products have not been approved by Health Canada, which means that
they have not been assessed for safety, efficacy and quality and
may pose a range of serious health risks. For example, they could
contain high-risk ingredients, such as prescription drugs,
additives or contaminants that may or may not be listed on the
label. These ingredients could interact with other medications and
foods. In addition, these products may not actually contain the
active ingredients that consumers would expect them to contain to
help maintain and improve their health. The product is also not
labelled in both English and French as required in Canada.
Prescription drugs should only be used under the advice and
supervision of a health care professional because they are used to
treat specific conditions and may cause serious side effects.
Prescription drugs can only be legally sold to consumers in
Canada with a prescription.
What you should do
- Do not use this product. Consult a health care professional if
you have used this product and have health concerns.
- Return the product to your local pharmacy for proper
disposal.
- Buy your prescription drugs from licensed pharmacies.
- Buy only authorized health products. Read product labels to
verify that health products have been authorized for sale by Health
Canada. Authorized health products have an eight-digit Drug
Identification Number (DIN), Natural Product Number (NPN) or
Homeopathic Drug Number (DIN-HM). You can also check whether
products have been authorized for sale by searching Health
Canada's Drug Product Database and Licensed Natural
Health Product Database.
- Report any health product-related side
effects or complaints to Health Canada.
Background
Ursodiol, also known as ursodeoxycholic acid, is a
prescription drug used for the management of cholestatic liver
diseases (diseases that involve blocked or reduced bile flow from
the liver). Serious side effects of taking ursodeoxycholic acid
include allergic reactions, chest pain and difficulty breathing,
stomach ache, nausea, diarrhea or constipation, swelling of the
extremities (e.g., hands and feet), high blood pressure, fatigue,
dizziness, headache, itchiness, fever and jaundice. Some patients
have experienced additional symptoms such as vomiting and pain in
the abdominal area caused by blockages in the gastrointestinal
tract, which requires medical intervention. Blood tests are needed
to monitor for the risk of liver toxicity from taking this drug.
Ursodeoxycholic acid should not be used by people who have an
allergy to ursodiol, have a blockage of bile flow due to liver or
other disease, or by people who are pregnant, planning to become
pregnant, or breastfeeding.
Également disponible en français
SOURCE Health Canada (HC)