Paracetamol/Tylenol in
pregnancy may lower testosterone in boys
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[May 21, 2015]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Pregnant women who take
the painkiller paracetamol regularly for long periods may put their
unborn sons' testosterone levels at risk, leading to possible
reproductive problems later in life, researchers said on Wednesday.
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In a study using mice with grafts of human tissue, the scientists
found that a week's paracetamol treatment led to a sharp fall in the
production of testosterone, a hormone that is critical to men's
life-long health.
"We would advise that pregnant women should follow current guidance
that the painkiller be taken at the lowest effective dose for the
shortest possible time," said Rod Mitchell, a clinical research
fellow at Edinburgh University who led the work.
Paracetamol, known as Tylenol in the United States, is one of the
most common medicines used to ease pain and reduce fever and is used
routinely during all stages of pregnancy.
The study, published in the journal Science Translational Medicine,
tested the effect of paracetamol on testosterone production in mice
with grafts of human testicular tissue designed to mimic how testes
develop and function in pregnancy.
Mitchell's team gave the mice a typical daily dose of paracetamol
over a period of either 24 hours or seven days and then measured the
amount of testosterone produced by the human tissue an hour after
the final dose of paracetamol.
After 24 hours of paracetamol treatment, they found no effect on
testosterone production, but after seven days of exposure, the
amount of testosterone fell by 45 percent.
Mitchell noted that reduced exposure to testosterone in the womb has
been linked to higher risk of infertility, testicular cancer and
undescended testicles. He said these latest results add to evidence
that prolonged paracetamol use in pregnancy "may increase the risk
of reproductive disorders in male babies".
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Sadaf Ghaem-Maghami, chair of the Royal College of Obstetricians and
Gynaecologists' scientific advisory committee said the research was
"robust" and had produced important findings, but that since it was
in animals with human tissues, it was difficult to extrapolate its
meaning for humans.
"Further research needs to be conducted into how paracetamol may
affect testosterone levels," she said in a statement, adding that
pregnant women should continue to follow guidelines and take the
lowest effective paracetamol dose for the shortest possible time
when necessary.
(Editing by Tom Heneghan)
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