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MuscleTech is a brand of dietary supplements, marketed by Iovate Health Sciences Inc., which includes Hydroxycut. It was owned by Canadian company Kerr Holdings which was acquired by the Xiwang Foodstuffs Company, a Chinese company, for $584 million in 2016.
Hydroxycut is a brand of dietary supplements that is marketed as a weight loss aid. Hydroxycut was originally developed and manufactured by MuscleTech Research and Development; MuscleTech was sold to Iovate Health Sciences in 2003–2004 and declared bankruptcy in 2005; Iovate continues to use MuscleTech as a brand to market Hydroxycut.
The following are settlements reached with US authorities against pharmaceutical companies to resolve allegations of "off-label" promotion of drugs. Under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, it is illegal for pharmaceutical companies to promote their products for uses not approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and corporations that market drugs for off-label indications may ...
The heavily marketed diet product line Hydroxycut has been blamed in the death of at least one person and for nearly two dozen serious ailments, prompting the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to ...
Alex Murdaugh and Russell Laffitte are accused of stealing $1.3M from his late wife’s wrongful death settlement. Now, millions more are gone after companies bought his kids’ future payments ...
Members of the family who own OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma, and the company itself, agreed to pay up to $7.4 billion in a new settlement to lawsuits over the toll of the powerful prescription ...
I disagree with this edit.The lead needs to summarize relevant aspects of the subject. The single most relevant aspect of Hydroxycut - if we judge by coverage in independent, reliable sources - is the harm caused by the supplement, the questionable behavior of its (previous) manufacturers, and its ultimate withdrawal from the market because of serious safety concerns.
They’ve since been able to recover about $36,000, but the rest is gone, along with their ability to purchase the condo, which has “substantially” increased in value, the lawsuit states.