HOME >> BIOLOGY >> NEWS
Quality standards issued for testing herbal products

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has issued the first suite of Standard Reference Materials (SRMs) in a planned series of reference materials for botanical dietary supplements.

The dietary supplement industry has exploded in the past decade to about 29,000 products, with about 1,000 new products introduced each year, according to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). In 2001 NIST began working with the FDA and the National Institutes of Health's Office of Dietary Supplements (NIH/ODS) on a series of SRMs of popular botanical dietary supplements. Manufacturers can use these materials for quality control, and researchers can use them to ensure that their laboratory analyses of supplements are accurate. Products such as botanical supplements, that have been derived from extracts of plant materials are challenging to analyze accurately because of their complex sample matrices.

The new NIST reference materials were designed primarily for quality control of supplements containing ephedra, a plant once widely used in herbal weight-loss products. Ephedra products were pulled from the market by the FDA in 2004 after being linked to cardiovascular problems, but the new test materials remain valuable both to assure that new products are not adulterated with ephedra and because they also can be used to improve several other key measurements in other botanical supplements, including concentrations of potentially toxic heavy metals.

The new reference materials represent several different forms of ephedra and include powdered plant material (SRM 3240), a ground solid oral dosage form (SRM 3243), and a protein powder (SRM 3244). The materials are certified for their concentrations of the ephedrine alkaloids and potentially toxic elements (including arsenic, cadmium, lead and mercury). SRM 3243 also provides certified values for synephrine (a compound in some of the "ephedra-free" weight-loss products) and caffeine. SRM 3244 ad
'"/>

Contact: Michael Baum
michael.baum@nist.gov
301-975-2763
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
30-Mar-2006


Page: 1 2

Related biology news :

1. Quality not quantity important for immune response to HIV
2. Quality of moms time, not quantity, most important in early infant development
3. UN, industry, others partner to create world standards for e-scrap recycling, harvesting components
4. AAAS applauds nationwide science and math standards based on existing guidelines
5. Study of toxins in Houston air warrants new standards
6. RNAi Global Initiative members advance standards for genome-wide RNAi research in second meeting
7. UCI receives major grant to help create national methods and standards for functional brain imaging
8. Portable radiation detectors generally meet standards
9. Urgent call to action issued to protect worlds most vulnerable populations from influenza pandemic
10. Modular leukemia drug shows promise in early testing
11. Rapid syphilis testing in Haiti will prevent congenital disease and stillbirths

Post Your Comments:
*Name:
*Comment:
*Email:
TAG: Quality standards issued for testing herbal products

(Date:5/16/2013)... the bone marrow in the liver, the spleen ... show that a specific type of immune cell facilitates ... hematopoiesis is essential for the function of the immune ... the liver and the spleen. Later the process is ... serves as the sole source of blood cells for ...
(Date:5/16/2013)... Ekwoge Enang Abwe, a conservationist working in Cameroon and ... program, has just been awarded the prestigious Whitley award. ... is often called "The Green Oscars" because it celebrates ... conservationists working in developing countries. Abwe was selected ... about and preserve Cameroon,s Ebo Forest and its wildlife ...
(Date:5/16/2013)... , May 16, 2013 ... Enhancement Award on Tuesday to Germany,s ... exceptional biometric border control system. DERMALOG has ... the Best Practices Award in the category Global Biometrics ... cutting edge Biometric   Border Control System . ...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):Herpes infections: Natural killer cells activate hematopoiesis 2Cameroon researcher wins prestigious 'Green Oscar' 2Cameroon researcher wins prestigious 'Green Oscar' 3Global Biometrics and Border Control Award for DERMALOG 2Global Biometrics and Border Control Award for DERMALOG 3Global Biometrics and Border Control Award for DERMALOG 4
(Date:5/17/2013)... USA (PRWEB) May 17, 2013 •    First ... Globes Certified for sustainability ,     New facility will ... , Syngenta unveiled its new ... at the company’s RTP Innovation Center. The first of ... researchers to simulate any agricultural climate and precisely measure ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... May 17, 2013  Insero Health, Inc., a company ... epilepsy and related neurological disorders, is today reporting top-line ... compound INS001 in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy.  The data ... Trials (AED) Xll meeting by Dr. Steven ... of Insero,s Scientific Advisory Board.  In this study, INS001 ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... Brea, CA (PRWEB) May 17, 2013 IAC ... DisperSol Technologies, a start up laboratory needing to set up ... be moving to a larger facility within a year’s time. ... the knowledge that the laboratory is temporary? What is efficient ... 4 Series modular workstations from IAC Industries. The planners at ...
(Date:5/16/2013)... (PRWEB) May 16, 2013 In late 2012, ... to speak to doctors in China about Appearance Medicine ... NZ, this was her first trip to lecture in China, ... visited Guangzhou and Fuzhou, home to 12 and 7 million ... is very high at this point in time. As Dr. ...
Breaking Biology Technology:Syngenta Opens Unique $72 Million Advanced Crop Lab 2Syngenta Opens Unique $72 Million Advanced Crop Lab 3Insero Health Reports Positive Data on Phase I Trial of Novel Therapy for Drug-resistant Epilepsy 2New Downloadable Success Story: “How To Outfit a Dynamic Lab in Flux” 2
Cached News: