Caffeine fix one deep breath away
Published 6:52 pm Tuesday, February 7, 2012
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts Move over, coffee and Red Bull. A Harvard professor thinks the next big thing will be people inhaling their caffeine from a lipstick-sized tube. Critics say the novel product is not without its risks.
The product, called AeroShot, went on the market late last month in Massachusetts and New York, and is also available in France. A single unit costs $2.99 at convenience, mom-and-pop, liquor and online stores.
Biomedical engineering professor David Edwards said AeroShot is safe and does not contain common additives, like taurine, used to amplify the caffeine effect in common energy drinks. Each gray-and-yellow plastic canister contains 100 milligrams of caffeine powder, about the amount in a large cup of coffee, plus B vitamins.
But Democratic U.S. Senator Charles Schumer of New York wants the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to review AeroShot, saying he fears it will be used as a club drug so that young people can drink until they drop. Schumers national press secretary did not immediately respond to calls for comment.
FDA spokeswoman Siobhan DeLancey declined to comment, saying the agency will respond directly to Schumer on the matter.
Edwards said Schumers comments are understandable in the context of developments over the last few years, when students looking for a quick and cheap buzz began consuming caffeine-packed alcoholic drinks they dubbed blackout in a can because of their potency. But he said AeroShot is not targeting anyone under 18 and it safely delivers caffeine into the mouth, just like coffee.
Even with coffee if you look at the reaction in Europe to coffee when it first appeared there was quite a bit of hysteria, he said. So anything new, theres always some knee-jerk reaction that makes us believe Well, maybe its not safe.
Once a user shoots a puff of calorie-free AeroShot into his or her mouth, the lemon-lime powder begins dissolving almost instantly. Each single-use container has up to six puffs.
The act of putting it in your mouth is the act of breathing so its sort of surprising and often people the first time they take the AeroShot, they laugh … that its kind of a funny way of putting food in your mouth, said Edwards, who also came up with a breathable chocolate product a few years back.
Dr. Lisa Ganjhu, a gastroenterologist and internal medicine doctor at New York-based St. Lukes-Roosevelt Hospital, said people need to be aware of how much caffeine they are ingesting.
You want those 10 cups of coffee, it will probably take you a couple hours to get through all that coffee with all that volume that you are drinking, Ganjhu said. With these inhale caffeine canisters you can get that in 10 of those little canisters so you just puff away and you could be getting all of that within the hour.
Even the product packaging warns people not to consume more than three AeroShots per day.
Northeastern University students who sampled the product recently gave it mixed reviews.
This tastes really good and I think it rocks, student Zack Huang said after puffing onto a free sample before rushing to join a group of friends who were walking away from campus.
Still, one student was not happy with the taste, echoing sentiment expressed online by some consumers.