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FDA is warning consumers not to use 3.5 oz. packages of an orange or red powder called Swad brand sindoor, because the product contains high levels of lead. The powder, which is applied to the face or scalp and used in some traditional South Asian Pacific ceremonies, is imported by Raja Foods LLC of Skokie, Illinois.
Although the product was not intended to be sold for food use, its labeling is confusing and implies that it may be used as food. The Illinois Department of Public Health has confirmed two cases of lead poisoning in consumers who used the product as an ingredient in home cooked meals. Other uses of the product, including as a cosmetic, can also be dangerous due to the high lead levels.
Effects of Lead
Lead can be toxic to all humans but due to the risks it poses to a developing nervous system, women of childbearing age, pregnant women and their unborn children, and young children should be especially cautious and limit their exposure to lead.
Symptoms of lead toxicity include: stomach aches, colic, nausea, vomiting, abnormal irritability, and insomnia. However, people with lead in their blood often do not exhibit symptoms.
Permanent damage to the central nervous system from lead exposure can result in learning difficulties in school children, as well as cause other long-term health problems such as kidney disease.
Date Posted: December 17, 2007