HISTORY:
DNP stands for 2,4-dinitrophenol. This is a chemical that was once used in the
early 20th century to ignite dynamite and cast a yellow dye on wood and other
handcrafts. A few years later demographical statistics showed that employees who
worked with DNP everyday tended to lose weight, often rapidly. One fall out from
this was a study conducted by Stanford University in 1920 showing that the
ingestion of DNP does in fact cause weight loss. This prompted physicians to
prescribe DNP to obese patients of that era. DNP was on the market for 2 decades
as a weight loss drug and was eventually taken off the market and banned for
human consumption by the FDA because there was a report of cataract formation
among female users of this drug which turned out to be false. This chemical is
still deemed too dangerous by the FDA to allow it to come back to the
pharmaceutical marketplace. Over the decades of research on DNP, scientists have
never shown it to have the ability to cause cancer or any other mutations
despite the fact that it's a phenol and that most phenolic compounds are
carcinogenic. DNP is now only used as a research chemical and as a pesticide in
a few states that still approve of its use. It is not illegal to own DNP, but it
is illegal to market it for personal consumption.