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French fitness blogger and Instagram model Rebecca Burger died over the weekend after a whipped cream canister exploded, hitting her in the chest.

The 33-year-old, who wrote about health, fitness and travel for her large social media following, died in what her family has described as a “domestic accident” at her home in eastern France. According to her loved ones, a whipped cream dispenser exploded, hitting her chest and causing a heart attack. She was taken to the hospital and died the following day.

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Burger’s family wrote a post on her social media accounts, warning that “tens of thousands of defective siphons are still out there.” The case is currently being investigated by French authorities, while Burger’s family reportedly has plans to sue the manufacturer.

As bizarre a case as this is, it isn’t entirely out of the blue. Ard’time, who makes the canister, released a press release this week reminding the public of a 2013 recall of the product. Although Burger is the first to die from such an incident, similar products have previously exploded and led to broken teeth, bones and, in one case, a lost eye, according to French consumer magazine 60 Millions de Consommateurs.

“Due to a fault in its conception, the siphon’s plastic cap appears much too fragile to withstand being put under pressure … as a result, the siphon could explode and injure the user and those around them,” the magazine warned, via The Guardian, noting that those made after 2015 have “appeared” safe. “This accident is even more unacceptable because the danger from some of these siphons, a very popular kitchen utensil made even more popular by reality television cooking programmes, has been known for years.”