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Heparin Likely Cut With Cheap Counterfeit Ingredient Reports New York Times

 
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Scientists investigating a mystery contaminant in the blood thinner heparin are closing in on what they believe is a counterfeit substance, most likely made in China from animal cartilage, that was chemically altered to act like the real drug.

The United States Food and Drug Administration declined to confirm that statement and a spokeswoman said the agency would have no comment.

But in interviews, heparin experts in China and the United States — including one researcher involved in the inquiry — said that a chemically altered substance called over-sulfated chondroitin sulfate is probably the contaminant that the F.D.A. says is linked to hundreds of allergic reactions and 19 deaths.

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