NEW YORK - A medical examiner blamed a 17-year-old track star's death on the
use of too much anti-inflammatory muscle cream, the kind used to soothe aching
legs after exercise.
This undated family photo provided to the Staten Island
Advance and released Saturday, June 9, 2007 shows Arielle Newman. Newman,
17, a cross-country runner at Notre Dame Academy in New York's Staten
Island, died on April 3, 2007, after her body absorbed high levels of
methyl salicylate, an anti-inflammatory found in sports creams such as
Bengay and Icy Hot, the New York City medical examiner said Friday, June
8, 2007. [AP]
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Arielle Newman, a cross-country
runner at Notre Dame Academy on Staten Island, died after her body absorbed high
levels of methyl salicylate, an anti-inflammatory found in sports creams such as
Bengay and Icy Hot, the New York City medical examiner said Friday.
The medical examiner's spokeswoman, Ellen Borakove, said the teen used
"topical medication to excess." She said it was the first time that her office
had reported a death from using a sports cream.
In addition to spreading the muscle cream on her legs between track meets,
Newman was using adhesive pads containing the anti-inflammatory, plus an
unspecified third product containing the chemical, Borakove said. The products
were used and the chemical absorbed over time, she said.
Newman, who garnered numerous track awards, died April 3. She had gone to a
party the night before, then returned home and spent hours talking with her
mother.
Methyl salicylate poisoning is unusual, and deaths from high levels of the
chemical are rare.
"Chronic use is more dangerous than one-time use," Edward Arsura, chairman of
medicine at Richmond University Medical Center, told the Staten Island Advance
on Friday. "Exercise and heat can accentuate absorption."
Dr. Ronald Grelsamer, of Mount Sinai Medical Center, said Newman had a very
abnormal amount of methyl salicylate in her body.
"She either lathered herself with it, or used way too much, or she used a
normal amount and an abnormal percentage was absorbed into her body," he said.
Her mother, Alice Newman, said she still couldn't believe her daughter's
death was caused by a sports cream.
"I am scrupulous about my children's health," she told the Advance. "I did
not think an over-the-counter product could be unsafe."
Johnson & Johnson, the makers of Bengay, expressed sympathy for the
family and reminded consumers about "the importance of reading the label on this
and all over-the-counter medicines to ensure safe and proper use," in a
statement released Saturday.
The label on Ultra Strength Bengay says the product should be applied no more
than three or four times daily and consumers should stop and see a doctor if the
condition worsens or symptoms persist for more than a week, spokeswoman Meghan
Marschall said.