Thousands of cases of Minute Maid "Zero Sugar" Lemonade that actually contained the standard, full-sugar lemonade were recalled in September, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced.
The mislabeled cans of lemonade were sent to stores in three states — Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio, the FDA said.
A statement from Coca-Cola, which owns Minute Maid, said that the impacted items were no longer on store shelves and customers in these states should not be concerned they were drinking a mislabeled product.
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A representative from Coca-Cola told Fox News Digital in an email on Wednesday that the company "voluntarily recalled a limited quantity" of the 12-ounce cans in the three states noted.
"No impacted product remains in the market, and all recall activities in those markets are complete," the representative said.
A total of 13,152 cases of the mislabeled lemonade were recalled, according to the FDA's release.
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Each case contains 12 cartons of 12 cans of lemonade.
Minute Maid Zero Sugar, which is sweetened with aspartame, has zero grams of sugar, Coca-Cola's website states.
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Conversely, Minute Maid Lemonade contains 28 grams of sugar per cup.
The FDA classified the incident as a "Class II" recall on Thursday.
A "Class II" recall is defined as "a situation in which use of, or exposure to, a violative product may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences or where the probability of serious adverse health consequences is remote," according to the FDA's website.
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It is less severe than a "Class I" recall, which means there is a "high likelihood" that the impacted product could cause serious injury or death.