Throughout the year, 6.3 percent of acetaminophen users take more
than the maximum recommended daily dose at least one day during
weeks when they use the drug, one study of 14,481 U.S. adults found.
During cold and flu season, however, people were 24 percent more
likely to exceed the maximum recommended dose of 4,000 milligrams at
least once a week.
Acetaminophen, sold as paracetamol in Europe, can ease a fever, but
many people may take too much of the painkiller out of a mistaken
belief that it will also cure the flu, said Dr. Liffert Vogt, a
researcher at the University of Amsterdam Academic Medical Center in
the Netherlands who wasn’t involved in the study.
“I would not recommend taking acetaminophen for cold and flu
symptoms,” Vogt said by email. “Taking a cup of soup will be much
more efficacious than taking a pill.”
In the U.S. study, the proportion of people taking too much
acetaminophen wasn’t large - 6.5 percent during cold and flu season
compared with 5.3 percent at other times of year. But because
millions of adults use the drug, the increase during cold and flu
season adds up to a large added risk in the general population, the
authors note.
Taking too much acetaminophen (Tylenol) is associated with liver and
kidney damage, especially at high doses and with long-term use, Vogt
said. While the risk of these complications is lower with
acetaminophen than with other painkillers like ibuprofen (Motrin) or
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories (NSAIDs) like Aleve, all of these
painkillers can cause problems when people take too much.
Patients need to read labels carefully to make sure all of the
different remedies they try to ease cold and flu symptoms don’t
contain more than the maximum recommended doses of acetaminophen or
other painkillers.
“Getting this message out is especially important during cold and
flu season, when people may be more likely to treat symptoms with
acetaminophen combination products, sometimes without even realizing
they contain acetaminophen,” lead study author Dr. Saul Shiffman of
Pinney Associates and the University of Pittsburg said in a
statement.
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The problem of acetaminophen overuse isn’t limited to the U.S.; a
second study examining painkiller use in France from 2006 to 2015
found that country to be the top user of acetaminophen in Europe.
France also ranked third for use of mild opioids, researchers found.
During the study period, use of acetaminophen surged 53 percent in
France.
Thousand-milligram tablets of acetaminophen have been the most
commonly used drug among adults there since 2008. While use of these
high-dose pills more than doubled during the 10-year study period,
use of 500-milligram tablets declined by 20 percent.
Both studies were published in the British Journal of Clinical
Pharmacology.
Neither study examined rates of health problems associated with
taking too much acetaminophen, nor why usage goes up seasonally or
over time. Another limitation of the studies is that researchers
couldn't distinguish medically necessary usage from potential
substance use problems or accidental overuse.
“This extensive analgesics consumption that we have documented
raises the concern of overuse and misuse, as well as addiction to
opioids,” said the lead author of the French study, Karima Hider-Mlynarz
of the French National Agency for Medicines and Health Products
Safety in Saint-Denis.
“Even it is prescribed and widespread used, none of the analgesic
drugs are harmless and the dose must always be respected,” Hider-Mlynarz
said by email.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2GiSCtG and https://bit.ly/2E3AKkz British
Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, online March 7 and March 25, 2018.
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