California woman dies after using toxic, lead-filled hemorrhoid cream

Due to the risk of lead poisoning, the OC Health Care Agency (HCA) urges users of the Vietnamese hemorrhoid ointment called Cao Bôi Trĩ Cây Thầu Dầu (Castor Oil Hemorrhoid Extract) to immediately stop using the ointment and to get their blood tested for lead. The alert follows the death of a woman in Sacramento who developed severe lead poisoning after using the ointment, according to the California Department of Public Health (CDPH). The CDPH said the ointment, purchased in Vietnam and shipped to the US, contained 4% (four percent) lead. Exposure to any amount of lead can be harmful.
State health officials are warning Californians to avoid a toxic Vietnamese ointment. It's unknown if the product is sold in California. (OC Health Care Agency)

California health officials are warning the public about a Vietnamese hemorrhoid ointment that is laced with a "highly dangerous amount of lead" and has killed a Sacramento woman.

California Health Department officials said in a written statement that the woman purchased the Vietnamese product in March through Facebook. A relative then shipped it to her from Vietnam. After using the ointment, the woman experienced symptoms related to lead poisoning and died.

The Vietnamese product, in a small, round green container, is called Cao Bôi Trĩ Cây Thầu Dầu (Castor Oil Hemorrhoid Extract). Health officials said samples of the product showed the ointment had about 4% lead, a “highly dangerous amount.”

Health officials say it’s unknown if the product is sold in California but are urging residents not to use it or to stop using it if they have the cream at home.

“We also recommend blood lead testing for all household members, especially children since they may have contact with the ointment,” officials wrote in the statement.

Lead can be absorbed through the skin, causing mild to moderate symptoms such as fatigue, and difficulty sleeping or concentrating, as well as severe symptoms such as stomach cramping, seizures and coma.

The Orange County Health Care Agency sent a public health alert Monday warning residents about the Vietnamese ointment.

Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Advertisement