A number of sporting authorities and countries have banned or heavily restricted the use of methylhexanamine as a dietary supplement, due to serious concerns about its safety. These countries include Australia, Brazil, Canada, Finland, New Zealand, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Sports authorities Many professional and amateur sports bodies, such as the
World Anti Doping Agency, have banned methylhexanamine as a performance-enhancing substance and suspended athletes that have used it. • March, 2012, a minor league baseball player, Cody Stanley, was suspended 50 games for testing positive after using a dietary supplement. • In July 2012, Welsh boxer
Enzo Maccarinelli was banned for six months after testing positive for methylhexanamine. •
VFL player Matthew Clark was suspended for two years after the banned substance was detected in his system after a game in 2011. • August, 2012, then minor league baseball player
Marcus Stroman was suspended 50 games for testing positive for methylhexanamine. • On 8 August 2013, US Weightlifter Brian Wilhelm accepted a nine-month suspension after testing positive for the drug in a urine sample from December 2012 at the American Open. •
MotoGP rider
Anthony West was suspended for one month by the FIM International Disciplinary Court (CDI) on 29 October 2012 after testing positive for the drug on 20 May 2012 at the French Grand Prix. This was increased retroactively to an 18-month suspension, starting from 20 May 2012, on 28 November 2013 after an appeal by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). • In December 2013, boxer
Brandon Rios, after losing a unanimous decision to
Manny Pacquiao, was suspended by the China Professional Boxing Association after testing positive for the drug. • During the
2014 Winter Olympics in
Sochi, three athletes tested positive for the drug: Italian bobsleigh brakeman and former
decathlete William Frullani, German
biathlete Evi Sachenbacher-Stehle and Latvian ice hockey forward
Vitalijs Pavlovs. • During the
2015 Asian Cup, Iraqi player
Alaa Abdul-Zahra was subject to an investigation relating to illegal usage of the drug. • In January 2016,
Algerian
footballer Kheiredine Merzougi was banned for two years by the
Confederation of African Football after testing positive for the drug. However, in March 2016, the international body
FIFA confirmed they were giving an extended four-year ban to apply worldwide through January 2020. • In November 2016, heavyweight boxer
Bermane Stiverne was fined US$75,000 after testing positive for methylhexanamine by the
World Boxing Council. The WBC, however, still allowed this fight to happen. • In 2017, the International Olympic Committee disqualified Jamaica's 2008 gold-winning 4x100 men's relay in
Beijing due to
Nesta Carter's positive testing for methylhexanamine. This cost
Usain Bolt a medal. •
AMA Supercross Championship rider Broc Tickle was provisionally suspended by the FIM International Disciplinary Court (CDI) on 13 April 2018 after testing positive for the drug following a drug test after the supercross round held in
San Diego on 10 February 2018. • On May 22, 2018,
Filipino basketball player
Kiefer Ravena was handed 18 months suspension by
FIBA to compete in international competition. He was found testing positive for methylhexanamine and 1,3-dimethlybutylamine by
WADA. Urine samples were taken after the Philippines vs Japan game at Manila during the
2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Qualification. Ravena explained that he consumes a pre-workout drink called C4, which can be bought from retailers around
Metro Manila. He ran out of supplies shortly before a training camp in Australia and took Blackstone Labs DUST, a supplement which is mixed with water and is supposedly similar to C4. • On August 26, 2019,
NASCAR crew chief Matt Borland was indefinitely suspended under the sanctioning body's substance abuse policy after testing positive for DMAA. In a statement, Borland said that the positive test was most likely caused by a diet coffee he had felt comfortable drinking "after doing my due diligence." Team owner Bob Germain Jr. also said that he did not believe Borland “had reason to know that the coffee contained a banned substance. However, we also understand and respect NASCAR’s decisions to strictly uphold their policies for each and every owner, driver and crew member in the garage." The suspension was lifted on September 24 after completing NASCAR's mandatory "Road to Recovery Program".
Governmental agencies In 2010, the US military issued a recall of all methylhexanamine-containing products from all military exchange stores worldwide. In July 2011,
Health Canada decided methylhexanamine was not a dietary substance, but was a drug requiring further approval. Consequently, Health Canada banned all sales of methylhexanamine. In June 2012, the National Food Agency of Sweden issued a general warning regarding use of methylhexanamine products, resulting in a sales ban in parts of the country. In July 2012, the National Health Surveillance Agency of Brazil issued a warning to the general public on the hazards of products that contain methylhexanamine. It also updated the list of prohibited substances to insert methylhexanamine, which translates into the banishment of products containing such ingredient from the Brazilian market. In 2012, Australia banned methylhexanamine. In New South Wales, methylhexanamine was classed as a "highly dangerous substance" on the poisons list. In August 2012, the UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has ruled that the popular DMAA containing sports supplement Jack3D is an unlicensed medicinal product and that it and all other methylhexanamine containing products need to be removed from the UK market amid concerns of potential risks to public safety. In 2012 the New Zealand Ministry of Health banned the sale of methylhexanamine products, due in part to its growing recreational use as
party pills. In April 2013, the
US Food and Drug Administration determined that methylhexanamine was potentially dangerous and did not qualify as a legal
dietary supplement; it warned supplement makers that it was illegal to market methylhexanamine and warned consumers of potentially serious health risks associated with methylhexanamine-containing products. The FDA has issued warning letters to manufacturers and distributors who continued to market products containing methylhexanamine. == See also ==