“Looking good should never cost you your health – or your life.” Poignant words by Fiona Parry, mother of 21-year-old British student, Eloise, who died in April after taking a popular diet pill she bought off the Internet.
Read: Global alert issued for deadly diet drug
Without telling her mother, Eloise bought pills containing DNP, a nasty little fat-burning chemical that is sold illegally and is unfit for human consumption. Bodybuilders love it, because it melts fat at an insanely daily rate (at least half a kilo a day apparently) with little or no muscle loss in users. That can sound like slimming heaven. The consequences can be hellish.
DNP is dinitrophenol, an industrial chemical used as a pesticide, and in the manufacturing of dyes and wood preservatives. US research at Stanford University in 1931 showed the compound’s effect on body fat loss, and it soon became a popular diet pill. It was taken off the market in 1938 because it killed many people – when it didn't make them desperately ill.
Eloise took a little more than the recommended starting dose (to me, the very idea of a 'recommended dose' of such a poisonous substance is an oxymoron on its own), but even in small doses, DNP is highly toxic. She knew all the risks, her mother says, but believed that “being slimmer was worth it”.
A BBC report explains the dangers of DNP:
Experts say that buying drugs online is “risky, as medicines may be fake, out of date or extremely harmful”. That’s putting it mildly. In Eloise’s case the drugs weren’t just harmful, they were fatal.
This article was initially published in Biznews.com newsletter. It has been republished with kind permission of the editor, Alec Hogg, and author Marika Sboros.
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