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Whatever happened to certain products?

 
 
Reply Fri 30 Dec, 2016 11:29 pm
First up is Mercurochrome. Feel free to add any you are interested in.
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http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2518/what-happened-to-mercurochrome

What happened to Mercurochrome?

July 23, 2004
Dear Cecil:

I had skin surgery recently and was told to apply Mercurochrome to aid in scarless healing. The product, once widely available, is sold by only one vendor in Boise, and I'm told they manufacture their own. Another pharmacist told me they were not allowed to handle or sell it. What happened to this antiseptic that I grew up with?

— David Young, Boise, Idaho

You're dating yourself, pops. Few under age 30 have ever heard of this stuff. In 1998, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration declared that Mercurochrome, generically known as merbromin, was "not generally recognized as safe and effective" as an over-the-counter antiseptic and forbade its sale across state lines. A few traditionalists complained: Whaddya mean, not generally recognized as safe? Moms have been daubing it on their kids' owies since the Harding administration! But the more reasonable reaction was: It's about time.

For many years the FDA, faced with the task of regulating thousands of pharmaceuticals and food additives, many of which long predated federal oversight, has maintained the so-called GRAS (generally recognized etc) list, originally compiled as a way of grandfathering in products like Mercurochrome that had been around for ages and hadn't hurt or killed a noticeable number of people. Recognizing that from a scientific standpoint such a standard left a lot to be desired, the FDA has been whittling away at the unexamined products on the GRAS list over time. Mercurochrome and other drugs containing mercury came up for scrutiny as part of a general review of over-the-counter antiseptics that began in 1978, and for good reason--mercury in large enough doses is a poison that harms the brain, the kidneys, and developing fetuses. While no one's offered evidence of mass Mercurochrome poisoning, the medical literature contains scattered reports of mercury toxicity due to use of the antiseptic, and these days the burden of proof is on drug manufacturers to show that their products' benefits outweigh the risks. In the case of Mercurochrome and many other mercury-containing compounds, that had never been done.

The FDA initially proposed clipping Mercurochrome's GRAS status in 1982 and asked for comment. Hearing little, the FDA classified the antiseptic as a "new drug," meaning that anyone proposing to sell it nationwide had to submit it to the same rigorous approval process required of a drug invented last month. (This took place in 1998--nobody's going to accuse the FDA of rushing to judgment.) It's not out of the question that a pharmaceutical company will do so someday--published research on Mercurochrome, though hardly abundant, suggests the stuff is reasonably effective. However, the approval process is time-consuming and expensive and any patent protection Mercurochrome might once have had surely expired long ago. For the foreseeable future those yearning for that delicious Mercurochrome sting will have to look somewhere else.

Other notes from the mercury wars, as long as we're on the subject:

Already illegal in some states and municipalities, mercury fever thermometers appear to be headed for history's dustbin. The U.S. Senate approved a federally mandated phase-out in 2002, although the bill didn't make it through the House. Even in jurisdictions where mercury thermometers are still legal, many drugstores are dropping them in favor of the digital electronic type, which are unarguably safer--although you don't get to play with those cool quicksilver globules when they break.
Despite two decades of controversy and threatened legislative bans, amalgam ("silver") tooth fillings, which are half mercury, are still a mainstay of dentistry. Although some health activists claim the mercury leaches out of the fillings and into the body, the FDA in a 2002 statement reaffirmed the mainstream view, to wit: "No valid scientific evidence has shown that amalgams cause harm to patients with dental restorations, except in the rare case of allergy."
Thimerosal, a mercury-containing preservative in vaccines, is suspected of causing autism and other neurological disorders in children. A recent review by a panel of prominent scientists found no evidence for the much-publicized autism link; nonetheless thimerosal is no longer used in most vaccines, flu shots being the chief exception.
More than 30 years after the alarm was first raised, mercury accumulation in fish remains the chief source of exposure to the toxic metal in the U.S. The FDA advises that pregnant women, women who may become pregnant, nursing mothers, and young children avoid shark, swordfish, king mackerel, and tilefish entirely and limit consumption of albacore tuna (canned white tuna and tuna steaks) to 6 ounces (one meal) per week. Canned light tuna, shrimp, salmon, pollock, and catfish are said to be OK for up to 12 ounces per week. Some say even these guidelines, particularly the one for albacore, are too permissive. I'm not one to encourage the paranoids, but when you look at some of the brain-damaged decisions that get made in this country, often you can't help but think somebody's mom ate too much fish.
— Cecil Adams
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roger
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Dec, 2016 11:59 pm
@edgarblythe,
You know, I've been wondering what happened to laundry detergent. The powdered kind that comes in boxes. Used to be, half a row at Smith's was devoted to the stuff. No more five feet of shelves devoted to different sizes and varieties of Tide. Now there's about five linear for all brands - maybe less.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Sat 31 Dec, 2016 05:17 am
@edgarblythe,
I'll never get over the loss of these.

http://cdn2.uk.mentalfloss.com/sites/mentalflossuk/files/6/87//amazin_raisin.jpg
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 31 Dec, 2016 07:32 am
@izzythepush,
I never had that, but it has to be amazing.
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 31 Dec, 2016 07:48 am
I knew people who felt devastated when Coca Cola introduced New Coke. It has always seemed obvious to me that Coke alters the formula ever so often, so I don't get their outrage. It was the same with Twinkies. Twinkies in the present form are inedible, but, take them off the market and people go nuts with grief. Because, "Now my son will never know the joy of opening up a Twinkie," or some such crap, as expressed by a man I know very well. I bought some when they first were re introduced and concluded sfter the first bite they ought to have been allowed to RIP.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Sat 31 Dec, 2016 07:55 am
@edgarblythe,
It's got two kinds of chocolate and caramel too, and it's got raisins and they're good for you.

Funny what sticks in your head from childhood.

Something else that you might a bit daft us getting upset over is when they rebranded marathons.

http://prima.cdnds.net/assets/16/20/480x480/gallery-1463505012-marathon-bar.jpg

I can't even bring myself to say the word snickers, sounds like a contraction of smelly knickers. And I'm sure marathons tasted nicer too.
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 31 Dec, 2016 08:05 am
@izzythepush,
They sold a Marathon candy bar here, back in what seems like the 60s, perhaps 70s. I think their TV ad is on youtube. Yep. I found several.

izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Sat 31 Dec, 2016 08:16 am
@edgarblythe,
I miss spangles too.



This one features a very young Nicholas Lyndhurst, who went on to become Rodney Trotter.

0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Reply Sat 31 Dec, 2016 01:39 pm
Sal Hepatica

Composition and mechanism of action[edit]
The product was composed of Glauber's salt (sodium sulfate), baking soda (sodium bicarbonate), tartaric acid, common salt (sodium chloride), sodium phosphate and traces of lithium carbonate and water. [2] It was marketed as a saline laxative and alkalinizing agent.[3][2] In the latter role it was recommended for dissolving uric acid in gout and "rheumatism", and for various other stomach, liver, and kidney disorders.[2] - Wikipedia

Some of the ads suggested it could cure colds.

The FDA began an investigation, which put an end to this product.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 31 Dec, 2016 02:37 pm
Carter's Little Liver Pills
In 1868, a fellow named Carter formulated a patent medicine and named it after himself, the famous “Carter’s Little Liver Pills.” It turned out, amazingly, that there were few human ailments these wonderful pills could not cure: sick headaches, biliousness, torpid liver, constipation and indigestion, sluggishness . . . the list went on and on. Truly Mr. Carter was a boon to humanity.

Except that, of course, the pills did little of what was claimed. They turned out to be pretty good laxatives; everything else was advertising hype. In 1959 the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) made the company drop the word “liver” from its name, considering it false and misleading advertising.

http://blogs.tiu.edu/bioethics/2013/02/08/the-return-of-carters-little-liver-pills/
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 1 Jan, 2017 08:26 am
Ayds (pronounced as "aids") Reducing Plan Candy was an appetite-suppressant candy which enjoyed strong sales in the 1970s and early 1980s and was originally manufactured by The Campana Company. It was available in chocolate, chocolate mint, butterscotch, and caramel flavors, and later a peanut butter flavor was introduced. The original packaging used the phrase "Ayds Reducing Plan vitamin and mineral Candy"; a later version used the phrase "appetite suppressant candy". The active ingredient was originally benzocaine,[1] presumably to reduce the sense of taste to reduce eating, later changed in the candy (as reported by The New York Times) to phenylpropanolamine.[2]

By the mid-1980s, public awareness of the disease AIDS caused problems for the brand due to the phonetic similarity of names. While initially sales were not affected, by 1988 the chair of Dep Corporation announced that the company was seeking a new name because sales had dropped as much as 50% due to publicity about the disease.[3] While the product's name was changed to Diet Ayds (Aydslim in Britain), it was eventually withdrawn from the market.
Wikipedia
ossobucotemp
 
  1  
Reply Sun 1 Jan, 2017 10:51 am
@edgarblythe,
I remember my mother being angry for my eating one; they were her special diet candies.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 1 Jan, 2017 10:41 pm
17 Candy Bars you will likely not see again
http://www.metv.com/lists/17-bygone-candy-bars-you-will-never-eat-again
0 Replies
 
centrox
 
  2  
Reply Mon 2 Jan, 2017 05:58 am
I remember when Trojans vanished from our small town store way out in the sticks. I can't remember exactly when. None of my 18 children can remember seeing them in the store.
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Mon 2 Jan, 2017 06:09 am
@centrox,
That figures.

https://i5.walmartimages.com/asr/9e95a001-b476-4d65-95e3-3e99af6c2982_1.de78f79c3acbc090e3edb0f2839c4860.jpeg?odnHeight=450&odnWidth=450&odnBg=FFFFFF
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Jan, 2017 03:51 pm
Sen Sen - people quit buying it.
Hydrox cookies - Buyer loyalty shifted to Oreos.
ossobucotemp
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Jan, 2017 09:53 pm
@edgarblythe,
I don't remember what sen sen was - will look up.

Ah, a breath freshener.
Me, I've almost complete anosmia and don't detect bad breath.
My dad couldn't smell either.
0 Replies
 
 

 
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