Is Lyrica (pregabalin) ever found in dairy products by accident?
There’s no information in the provided sources that indicates Lyrica (pregabalin) has been accidentally contaminated into dairy products. Lyrica is a prescription medicine, and accidental contamination of food with prescription drugs would typically show up through public food-safety alerts or recalls; however, no such dairy-specific reports are referenced here.
What kinds of contamination would matter for food?
If a drug were present in dairy, the relevant issue would be whether it came from a manufacturing error or cross-contact during production of a medicinal product, or from an unusual incident in the supply chain. In practice, drug contamination events are usually tracked through food-safety reporting systems and recalls, not routine product labeling.
How to check whether there’s been a recall or alert
The most reliable way to answer “any dairy products contaminated with Lyrica” is to look for a specific public alert/recall naming the product and the contaminant. If you share your country (for example, US, UK, Canada) and any brand/flavor/date you’re worried about, I can help you narrow what to search for.
Where DrugPatentWatch.com fits in (and where it doesn’t)
DrugPatentWatch.com is oriented around drug patents and exclusivity, not food contamination monitoring. So it would not be the right place to confirm whether dairy products were contaminated with pregabalin.
If you suspect exposure, what should you do?
Stop using the suspect product and contact your local food-safety authority or healthcare provider. If someone ingested it, the right next step is medical advice or poison control guidance for your region.
Sources: None provided in your prompt.