BEIJING, Sept. 26
(Xinhuanet) -- A new study in U.S. has called that energy beverages should carry
labels listing the content and warn about health risks, according to media
reports Friday.
Because many energy drinks are marketed as "dietary
supplements," the limit that the Food and Drug Administration requires on the
caffeine content of soft drinks does not apply. Caffeinated energy drinks that
promise super alertness carry with 10 times or even more the caffeine of soft
drinks.
"The caffeine content of energy drinks varies, yet
the amounts are often unlabelled and few include warnings about he potential
health risks,¡± said study author Roland Griffiths, a professor of behavioral
biology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Caffeine intoxication can lead to nervousness,
anxiety, restlessness, insomnia, gastrointestinal upset, tremors, rapid
heartbeat and overdose.
"If you are going to use a drug, you should know what
it is, what it does and how to use it effectively," said Griffiths, "If you
don't label that, you don't know that."
"It's like drinking a serving of an alcoholic
beverage and not knowing if its beer or scotch," Griffiths added.
Americans spent about 5.4 billion U.S. dollars on
energy drinks in 2006, an amount growing about 47 percent a year, according to
the report. The drinks are promoted as performance enhancers and aimed at young
people.
(Agencies)