PPA Side Effects Law Suits
(PHENYLPROPANOLAMINE)
PPA Drug Recall Litigation
More than six billion - that's billion! - doses of PPA (Phenylpropanolamine) have been taken annually by U.S. consumers in a variety of cold remedies and diet aids, including in prescription drugs and popular over-the-counter products. But after decades of use, the drug has been linked to an increased risk of stroke, particularly in women. In November 2000, the FDA requested that all drug companies voluntarily discontinue the use of PPA and reformulate their products using safer drugs. The FDA is currently seeking to ban the use of PPA in pharmaceutical products.
More than 400 products were sold containing PPA, including variations of the following:
Alka-Seltzer Plus
Contac
Robitussin-CF
Dimetapp
Tavist-D
Triaminic
Accutrim
Dexatrim
PPA was used in various products for more than 50 years to relieve stuffy nose or sinus congestion for cold sufferers and to act as an appetite suppressant in diet aids.
But alarm bells sounded over the medication after a study by the Yale University School of Medicine linked PPA use to hemorrhagic stroke (bleeding in the brain), most notably for women 18 to 49 years old. The study associated strokes with PPA because episodes occurred close in time to use of the medication. But perhaps a more convincing correlation was the fact that many of the PPA users who suffered strokes were otherwise healthy, often younger adults who were not otherwise likely candidates for stroke.
While the risk of stroke due to PPA use appears relatively low, it is estimated that the widely used drug was responsible for 200 to 500 strokes each year in the United States.
PPA FAQs
PPA News
If you or a loved one has suffered a hemmoragic stroke after using a PPA product, you need a law firm with the resources and the experience to bring you justice. Please call or e-mail the pharmaceutical litigation attorneys at Kline & Specter. We'll evaluate your PPA stroke claim for free and we don't get paid unless you do. Our expertise will help you get the compensation you deserve.

Pharmaceutical Injury Lawyers
Call 1-800-597-9585
or
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This page was last updated on January 31, 2007.
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