Researchers analyzed data on almost 113,000 children and their
parents, including 2,246 kids who were diagnosed with ADHD. Almost
half of the mothers took acetaminophen (also known as paracetamol)
at some point during pregnancy, researchers report in Pediatrics.
Using the drug during just one trimester was associated with 7
percent higher odds of having a child with ADHD, while the increased
risk was 22 percent for women who used acetaminophen in two
trimesters and 27 percent with use in all three trimesters, the
study found.
Short-term use didn’t appear to increase the risk for ADHD. In fact,
when women took acetaminophen for less than 8 days, they were 10
percent less likely to have kids with ADHD than mothers who didn’t
use the drug at all during pregnancy, the study found.
Women used the medicine for fever and infections for 22 to 28 days,
however, were more than six times more likely to have kids with ADHD
than mothers who avoided the drug during pregnancy.
“Surprisingly, adjusting for all the medical conditions related to
acetaminophen use during pregnancy (e.g., infections and pain) and
familial genetic risk for ADHD, children exposed to long-term use of
acetaminophen use during pregnancy were more than two times more
likely to have ADHD diagnosed by a specialist in a clinic,” said
lead study author Eivind Ystrom of the Norwegian Institute of Public
Health and the University of Oslo.
“This is important, since more than 50 percent of women in western
countries use acetaminophen during pregnancy, a large number of
children are also exposed to long term use,” Ystrom said by email.
Overall, researchers estimated that about 4 percent of the children
in the study would have an ADHD diagnosis by age 13.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how prenatal acetaminophen use might directly cause ADHD.
One limitation of the study is that long-term use of acetaminophen
during pregnancy might indicate a more serious illness or injury,
and researchers lacked data on the severity of conditions that led
women to use the drug.
Another drawback is that researchers relied on survey data to
identify when and how long in pregnancy women used acetaminophen as
well as the reasons they took the drug. Many people in the study
also didn’t report a reason for using acetaminophen.
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It’s possible that the connections between acetaminophen and ADHD in
the study were merely due to chance, said Dr. Antonio Saad, a
researcher at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston
who wasn’t involved in the study.
“One also has to keep in mind that not using acetaminophen can have
negative consequences,” Saad said by email. “Other pain and fever
medications, such as ibuprofen, should not be used in pregnancy,
which leaves narcotics as the only alternatives for pain and no
alternatives for fever.”
Doctors generally advise pregnant women to take acetaminophen in the
smallest dose possible for the shortest possible period of time when
they have fevers.
“I don't think that a very moderate dose of acetaminophen during
only a few days would have any real effect on the developing brain,”
Jordi Julvez, a researcher at the Barcelona Institute for Global
Health who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email.
The increased risk of ADHD linked to longer use of acetaminophen
might also be due to the severity of medical problems women had, not
their use of the drug, said Dr. Chittaranjan Andrade of the National
Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bangalore, India.
A serious fever or infection, for example, might be the reason
babies developed ADHD, not acetaminophen their mothers took,
Andrade, who wasn’t involved in the study said by email.
“The results of this study do not adduce sufficiently strong data to
discourage the use of (acetaminophen) if indicated during any
trimester during pregnancy,” Andrade said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2lv69se Pediatrics, online October 30, 2017.
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