Unveiling Internet celebrity plum juice: is it actually a 'laxative' drink?

2026-03-15 18:59

Economic Observation Network [# Internet celebrity Ximeng juice actually hides powerful laxatives #] # Viagra ingredient detected in some tea and coffee # Jelly, Ximeng juice, and other products claiming to be "saviors of big meals" hide powerful laxatives, while tea drinks that focus on "health" effects contain "Viagra"... When "fraud" sneaks into e-commerce live streaming rooms and offline supermarkets in a more covert way, how can ordinary consumers without discerning eyes identify it? What kind of black industry chain is hidden behind these "ordinary foods" that illegally add laxatives, diuretics and other drug ingredients? On the eve of International Consumer Rights Day on March 15, 2026, a poster news reporter walked into the testing laboratory of "the first person to crack down on counterfeits" Wang Hai and followed a professional team to uncover a hidden scam about "toxic food". #315 fraud without leaving#

On the display rack, the reporter found that several commonly known plum and plum juice were also prominently listed. The testing report shows that these products claiming to "clear the intestines," "promote bowel movements," and "save the life of the big meal" have illegally added potent laxative ingredients such as phenolic derivatives, bisaconitine derivatives, or similar substances. In addition to foods that claim to regulate the digestive system, slim down and lose weight, foods that claim to have effects such as enhancing sexual function and health are also a "disaster area" for illegal additives. This looks like ordinary tea, but we have detected sildenafil and tadalafil, commonly known as' Viagra 'ingredients, from it. This is a strictly controlled prescription drug and is absolutely not allowed to be added to food, "laboratory manager Wang Yang (pseudonym) picked up a tea beverage product that looked no different from ordinary tea and told reporters. Non functional and non functional substances refer to drugs such as sildenafil, tadalafil, and their derivatives, which are mainly used clinically to treat male sexual dysfunction. Some illegal merchants mix it into alcoholic beverages, compressed candies, coffee and other foods, selling it under the name of "functional food", claiming that the product has "anti fatigue", "kidney tonifying and male strengthening" effects, and the price is very high. (Dahe Network)

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