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High Tylenol Doses Linked to Liver Woes
Drudge report ^ | July 4, 2006 | CARLA K. JOHNSON - AP

Posted on 07/04/2006 4:49:03 PM PDT by RDTF

Healthy adults taking maximum doses of Tylenol for two weeks had abnormal liver test results in a small study, researchers found, raising concerns that even recommended amounts of the popular painkiller might lead to liver damage.

In the study, 106 participants took four grams of Tylenol _ equivalent to eight extra-strength Tylenol tablets _ each day for two weeks. Some took Tylenol alone and some took it with an opioid painkiller. Dummy pills were given to 39 others.

There were no alarming liver test results among the people who took the placebos. But nearly 40 percent of people in all the other groups had abnormal test results that would signal liver damage, according to the study that appears in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

"I would urge the public not to exceed four grams a day. This is a drug that has a rather narrow safety window," said a study co-author, Dr. Neil Kaplowitz of the University of Southern California.

Heavy drinkers should take no more than two grams daily, Kaplowitz said.

(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: health; medicine; tylenol; tylenolliverdamage
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To: GovernmentShrinker

All the NSAIDs have the commonality of producing gastrointestinal upset that can lead to bleeding ulcers with prolonged use. Acetaminophen is usually lumped into the NSAID discussion but does not produce this gastrointestinal upset and actually, one of the indications for the use of acetaminophen is to treat gastritis.

The most common affliction of people taking NSAIDs is the irritable bowel syndrome or acid reflux -- which is the fastest growing treatment modality of the Baby Boom generation. If most of those people would switch to acetaminophen, the incidence of gastrointestinal upset virtually disappears -- because tht is not one of its notable side effects.

The creator of the guaifenesin protocol for the treatment of fibromyalgia has noted widespread adverse reactions to aspirin -- but thinks it only happens with those who have fibromyalgia rather than it is much more universal in the general population.

For many years I had increasing irritable bowel symptoms after using NSAIDs for childhood arthritis, until after bleeding internally, I decided I had nothing to lose by seeing if acetaminophen would work. The pains are as well controlled and there is no gastrointestinal upset -- which I thought was an inevitable aging effect.

The liver damage has been mostly noted in those deliberately trying to commit suicide by the use of acetaminophen with alcohol. Other than that, its superior safety record accounts for the majority of baby pain relievers being acetaminophen rather than aspirin.


61 posted on 07/04/2006 11:36:50 PM PDT by MikeHu
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To: Clara Lou
Let's see...this stuff has been around for 30 years, minimum, and now they're discovering this?

Funny, I'm no doctor and I've know it for years. I thought everyone did.

62 posted on 07/04/2006 11:42:15 PM PDT by rkhampton
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To: carmenbmw

Being a pharm tech was nice, read up on the toxicology reports for APAP, and moved to Ibu. Well, that and the day I took 8 apap in 3 hours to get rid of a head ache that was not going away.


63 posted on 07/05/2006 12:34:54 AM PDT by Brellium ("Thou shalt not shilly shally!" Aron Nimzowitsch)
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To: vikzilla

800 mg. or more daily.


64 posted on 07/05/2006 2:52:42 AM PDT by freeangel ( (free speech is only good until someone else doesn't like what you say))
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To: Little Bill

I have been taking Tylenol Extended Relief for Arthritis which has been working better for me than Naproxen. Did your doc tell you to stay away from Tylenol?


65 posted on 07/05/2006 3:35:18 AM PDT by babydoll22 (The facts ma'am, just the facts. I don't give a s**t how you feel.)
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To: RDTF

There is a chemical that can be added to acetaminophen to make it much safer - a sort of built-in antidote. For some reason drug companies don't just add it. It is a precursor to a chemical called glutathione that somehow slows or stops the liver damage.


66 posted on 07/05/2006 3:55:55 AM PDT by ko_kyi
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