Two pharma Cos Syrup samples found to have contaminants
Samples of syrups manufactured by two pharmaceutical companies based in Gujarat and Tamil Nadu have been found to have contaminants ethylene glycol and diethylene glycol, which were earlier detected in some syrups that were allegedly linked to deaths in the Gambia, Uzbekistan and Cameroon since last year.
These are among 48 drugs, samples of which were declared as “not of standard quality” and “spurious” by the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO), out of a total of 1,166 samples tested in August.
Samples from a batch of cough syrup and another batch of anti-allergy syrup manufactured by Gujarat-based Norris Medicines Limited were found to be not of standard quality, containing 0.118 per cent ethylene glycol and 0.171 per cent ethylene glycol and 0.243 per cent diethylene glycol respectively.
Norris Medicines Ltd was asked to suspend production at its Ankleshwar plant a month ago, an official said.
Samples from three batches of COLD OUT syrup having paracetamol, phenylephrine, and chlorpheniramine and used for relieving nasal congestion, runny nose and fever, etc., manufactured by Tamil Nadu-based Fourrts (India) Laboratories, were also found to have both the contaminants — ethylene glycol 1.9 per cent and diethylene glycol 0.14 per cent.
The WHO in August had raised an alert over a batch of contaminated COLD OUT cough syrup supplied in Iraq and manufactured by the same company.
H G Koshia, Commissioner of Gujarat’s Foods and Drug Control Administration (FDCA), said Norris Medicines Ltd. was asked to suspend production at its Ankleshwar plant a month ago.
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