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Fake fat gets FDA's okay.


Last week, the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of olestra olestra Sucrose polyester, Olean® A proprietary synthetic–no-calorie fat, approved by the FDA–for use in savory snack foods–eg, tortilla chips, potato chips, and crackers; Side effects GI discomfort including cramps, diarrhea; it , a synthetic fat substitute, but only in snack foods A list of snack foods is shown below. For more information, see snack foods. List of snack foods
Chips
(Crisps)
  • Banana chips
  • Bugles
  • Cheese curls
  • Cheese puffs
  • Combos
  • Corn chips
  • Nachos
  • Pita chips
  • Pretzel
  • Potato chips
. Procter & Gamble, the Cincinnati-based creator of olestra, has given it the trade name Olean. A compound of fatty acids and sugar, olestra is neither absorbed nor digested in the body and therefore contributes no calories to foods (SN: 1/27/96, p. 61). Announcing the action, FDA FDA
abbr.
Food and Drug Administration


FDA,
n.pr See Food and Drug Administration.

FDA,
n.pr the abbreviation for the Food and Drug Administration.
 Commissioner David Kessler David Kessler may refer to:
  • David Kessler (actor) (1860-1920), Yiddish theater
  • David Aaron Kessler (born 1951), FDA Commissioner, university medical dean
  • David Kessler, Pennsylvania state representative, elected 2006
 acknowledged olestra's shortfalls. "Olestra may cause abdominal cramping cramping

see cramp.
 and loose stools in some individuals, and [it] inhibits the body's absorption of certain fat- soluble vitamins and nutrients," he says. FDA states that it will require Procter & Gamble to label all foods containing olestra with a warning of those ill effects.

Nevertheless, the agency decided that olestra is safe.

Procter & Gamble, which introduced Crisco shortening in 1911, plans to test- market a line of olestra-containing foods, such as potato chips, cheese puffs, and club crackers, during the next few months. Eventually, the company will put Olean in a broad variety of snack products, says spokesperson Wendy W. Jacques. She says foods made with Olean have the "great taste" of real fat without the added calories.

Yet critics have denounced FDA's action on olestra.

"I find it incredible that Dr. Kessler would certify this food additive as safe," says Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a consumer group based in Washington, D.C.

Jacobson notes that many prominent scientists have warned FDA of olestra's ill effects, including its ability to rob the body of key nutrients called carotenoids Carotenoids
Carotenoids are yellow to deep-red pigments.

Mentioned in: Vitamin A Deficiency

carotenoids (k
. Researchers have reported evidence that carotenoids, which are found in fresh fruits and vegetables, protect against certain cancers and other serious diseases.
COPYRIGHT 1996 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Science News of the Week; Food and Drug Administrations approves olestra in snack foods
Author:Fackelmann, Kathleen A.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Feb 3, 1996
Words:286
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