Hidden poison in your medicine and supplements

Kay Kim

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
Hidden poison in your medicine and supplements: How phthalates in capsules are silently attacking your heart, thyroid, and hormones
05/15/2025 // Lance D Johnson

Millions of Americans pop soft gel capsules daily — pain relievers, vitamins, even cough syrups — unaware that they’re ingesting a dangerous plasticizer linked to heart attacks,infertility, thyroid problems, and cancer. Dr. Evan Levine, a New York cardiologist, is sounding the alarm: Phthalates, the industrial chemicals used to make plastic flexible, are hiding in medicine shells, leaching into our bodies, and wreaking havoc on our cardiovascular systems. While regulators turn a blind eye, Big Pharma and supplement manufacturers continues to dose the public with these endocrine-disrupting toxins, prioritizing profit over health. The evidence is mounting — phthalates inflame arteries, spike heart disease risk, and may be shortening lives. But this is just the tip of the plastic iceberg.

Key points:
  • Phthalates, used to soften plastic, are found in medicine capsules, cosmetics, food packaging, and household products.

  • A 2021 study linked high phthalate levels to increased cardiovascular deaths.

  • A 2016 study linked phthalate levels to thyroid issues, fetal risks.

  • Soft gel capsules (used for painkillers, vitamins, and cold meds) are a major exposure source.

  • Phthalates cause arterial inflammation, oxidative stress, and cholesterol imbalances.

  • Americans have significantly higher phthalate levels than Europeans due to lax regulations.

  • Simple swaps (glass containers, fragrance-free products) can reduce exposure.

The silent killer in your pill bottle​

Phthalates don’t just lurk in plastic water bottles or vinyl flooring — they’re inside the very medicines millions trust to heal them. These chemicals, classified as plasticizers, keep gelatin capsules from cracking, making them a favorite for drug manufacturers. But once ingested, they mimic hormones, disrupt endocrine function, and trigger systemic inflammation. Dr. Levine warns, "Phthalates increase inflammation, a major risk for heart disease." A 2021 Environmental Pollution study confirmed this, showing adults with higher phthalate levels were more likely to die from heart disease.

The mechanism is sinister: phthalates irritate arterial walls, causing them to stiffen and narrow — similar to the damage from cholesterol plaques. This forces the heart to work harder, escalating the risk of blockages, aneurysms, and sudden cardiac events. Even worse, these chemicals spike triglycerides and "bad" LDL cholesterol while sabotaging the body’s ability to regulate blood flow.

Ten shocking sources of phthalate​

  • Medicine capsules – Soft gels for ibuprofen, fish oil, and supplements.

  • Food packaging – Plastic-wrapped meats, microwavable meals.

  • Cosmetics – Nail polish, hairspray, perfumes (listed as "fragrance").

  • Vinyl flooring – Off-gasses phthalates into household dust.

  • Children’s toys – Despite bans, some still contain phthalates.

  • Cleaning products – Scented sprays, detergents.

  • Medical tubing – IV bags and catheters leach phthalates into patients.

  • Air fresheners – Plug-in scents release phthalates into the air.

  • Shampoos & lotions – Especially those with synthetic fragrances.

  • Canned foods – Liners often contain phthalate-based resins.

Phthalates and thyroid damage, fetal risks​

This 2016 PLoS ONE study by Huang et al. investigated the impact of early-pregnancy phthalate exposure on thyroid hormones in 97 pregnant women from Taiwan. Analyzing urine (for 11 phthalate metabolites) and blood samples (for thyroid hormones), researchers found high detection rates for MEP, MnBP, and MECPP. After adjusting for confounders, elevated urinary MnBP (a DnBP metabolite) was significantly associated with reduced serum thyroxine (T4) levels (? = -5.41, p = 0.012), suggesting DnBP exposure may disrupt thyroid function in early pregnancy. The findings highlight potential risks to fetal development, warranting further research.

Unlike Europe, where phthalates are heavily restricted, the U.S. allows these chemicals to saturate everyday products. A Daily Mail investigation revealed American journalists had phthalate levels up to 96% higher than the national average—far worse than their British counterparts. Sophia Ruan Gushée, a detox expert, notes, "Americans grow up surrounded by disposable plastics. In Europe, they use more natural materials." The UK bans four phthalates in kids’ products; the U.S. bans just three. Even "BPA-free" plastics often contain equally harmful substitutes like BPS, which disrupts hormones just as aggressively.

Until regulators crack down, the burden falls on individuals to protect themselves — one plastic-free step at a time.

Sources include:

Dailymail.co.uk

Science.NaturalNews.com

Dailymail
 
How are they listed in the ingredients of supplements?
They are not, as
Phthalates, the industrial chemicals used to make plastic flexible,
So they are in gel capsules coats, packaging etc. Producers are not obliged to list them. Usually company orders the packaging i.e for the shampoo or other products from another company, and when you receive a bottle or a plastic bag (i.e. for i.v liquids) you don't get all the ingredients of packaging listed, they list just the content, medicine or cosmetics :)
 
This article from AARP (American Association of Retired Persons) Magazine
Drugs That May Cause Memory Loss
Antianxiety drugsAntiseizure drugsTricyclic antidepressants (older class) • Narcotic painkillersSleeping aidsIncontinence drugsAntihistamines (first generation)
For a long time, doctors dismissed forgetfulness, brain fog and mental confusion as normal parts of aging. But scientists now know that memory loss as you get older is by no means inevitable. In fact, routine memory, skills and knowledge may even improve with age, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Most people are familiar with at least some of the things that can impair memory, including alcohol and drug abuse, heavy cigarette smoking, head injuries, stroke, sleep deprivation, severe stress, vitamin B12 deficiency and illnesses such as Alzheimer’s disease and depression.
But what many people don’t realize is that a number of commonly prescribed drugs also can interfere with memory. Here, we’ll delve into seven types of drugs that may cause memory loss and explore alternative treatment options.
Full Article
 
Last edited:
I just downloaded the “Yuka” app on my phone. It allows you to scan a barcode on food products/cosmetics/shampoos etc and rates it for toxic ingredients and lists what’s in it and tells you why it’s toxic. Sometimes a poor rating is from high amounts of sugar or saturated fats. After I did some scanning, a few items went in the trash!!

Unfortunately, it doesn’t include supplements.
 
What are we supposed to do?
Well... The best approach would be to assess the risk vs benefit of the items that might/do contain phthalates. Remove all unnecessary items (ex: soft plastic water/juice bottles, cheap cosmetics, etc). Keep those whose benefits are higher than the risk (ex: Omega fish oil in a gel capsule).

We are exposed to tons of chemicals daily, so it's impossible to avoid all of them. The best approach is to do our best to remove all unnecessary ones and stay on top of our health protocol to help our body detox.
 
For some supplements, I've stopped buying encapsulated forms, and instead buy the powders in bulk from iherb. I do this for both Magnesium and NAC, mostly because I couldn't find brands for these supplements without magnesium stearate, silicon dioxide, and other fillers. It's also cheaper, and there's no capsule at all. Though I wonder about absorption.

The phthalates are concerning. I'm not sure I'd be able to find non-encapsulated forms of everything, tho. I don't know if it makes sense to get too worried about living a perfectly pure life here in 3D as we live in a pretty toxic world in general. Just walking through town when there's traffic will result in the inhalation of all kinds of exhaust chemicals. My take is do what I can to reduce exposure, and then trust the body and the DCM to take care of the rest.
 
For some supplements, I've stopped buying encapsulated forms, and instead buy the powders in bulk from iherb. I do this for both Magnesium and NAC, mostly because I couldn't find brands for these supplements without magnesium stearate, silicon dioxide, and other fillers. It's also cheaper, and there's no capsule at all. Though I wonder about absorption.

The phthalates are concerning. I'm not sure I'd be able to find non-encapsulated forms of everything, tho. I don't know if it makes sense to get too worried about living a perfectly pure life here in 3D as we live in a pretty toxic world in general. Just walking through town when there's traffic will result in the inhalation of all kinds of exhaust chemicals. My take is do what I can to reduce exposure, and then trust the body and the DCM to take care of the rest.
I agree with you. And do exercise, Yoga, dance, anything to stir the energy. Meditation. Read. Have a dog. Laugh. Be with friends.
 
What are we supposed to do? Stop taking supplements? How do we identify which supplements have phthalates?
Everyone here already mentioned great ways to avoid gel capsules, like powders or pills with nice ingredients from good manufacturer.

I have one example - I have witamin E gel capsules and when i want to use them (i use the content on my skin) i just prick it with a needle and squeeze to get the content. My friend pointed me to this idea, as her doctor told her to eat wit. E but just squeeze everything into her mouth and throw away the rest and not eat it :)

I think also detox ways mentioned on the Forum, i.e. sauna, exercises are a good way to maintain it.

As alredy mentioned here, we live in a toxic world nevertheless and trying to avoid everything toxic there is could turn into some obsessions and results in not leaving home :P
 
Back
Top Bottom