France's health regulator today recalled a diuretic used to control high blood pressure after some packets of the drug were found to contain sleeping pills -- a mistake feared linked to two deaths.
Stressing this was a precautionary measure, the ANSM regulatory agency urged people to return all boxes of Furosemide Teva 40 mg to their pharmacists.
The agency suspended sales of two batches of the drug last Friday after a pharmacist reported sleepiness in a patient.
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Today, the ANSM reported another death and one person falling ill, and said one of them had been taking the same medicine.
The agency did not specify which one of the patients, nor why it linked the other person to the case.
"Other reports are being investigated," it added.
The agency urged people to return the medicine to their pharmacist "as soon as possible" -- regardless of the lot number, to be replaced by another brand.
Furosemide Teva 40 mg is a diuretic used to treat water retention in people with congestive heart failure and disorders of the liver, kidney and lung.
The drug works by increasing the amount of urine produced and excreted, and removing excess water in the body. It is also used for high blood pressure.
France has had a series of medical scares since it emerged domestic company PIP had produced breast prostheses containing industrial-grade silicone gel.
An estimated 300,000 women in 65 countries are believed to have received faulty implants.