Warning issued for energy drink popular with fitness influencers
All flavours of an energy drink popular with fitness influencers and celebrities is under a consumption warning from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
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All flavours of an energy drink popular with fitness influencers and celebrities is under a consumption warning from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
www.ctvnews.caHealth Canada says energy drinks can have no more than 180 milligrams of caffeine in them and must have proper labelling, but Alani Nu is advertised as having 200 mg per can.
globalnews.caDuring the LA wildfires in January, influencer Sydney Sims posted a video on TikTok of shopping for what she needed to evacuate from her home in Hollywood. Into her Target cart went a box of protein bars, pet food and a few toys for her cats. 'Now we're trying to find the essentials — AKA, Alani,' she said before grabbing a case of the energy drink Alani Nu, plus two cans from a store fridge for the road.
www.bloomberg.comHealth Canada says energy drinks can have no more than 180 milligrams of caffeine in them and must have proper labelling, but Alani Nu is advertised as having 200 mg per can.
globalnews.caThe family's attorney said that Larissa Nicole Rodriguez had no pre-existing heart problems and that 'the only thing she had in her system was caffeine.'
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