High doses of Tylenol linked to Liver Problems?
Physicians really love “blind studies” where one group of individuals is given a particular medication while another group is given placebos (e.g., a ‘dummy’ pill). Now here comes a study that even lawyers might appreciate:
In an Associated Press, July 5, 2006, story it seems that healthy adults, who were given maximum doses of Tylenol for two weeks had abnormal liver test results, 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 appeared recently in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
One of the study co-authors, Dr. Neil Kaplowitz, of the
Another co-author, Dr. Paul Watkins of the
The maker of Tylenol, McNeil Consumer & Specialty Pharmaceuticals, said its own research found much lower rates of abnormal liver results. The company’s studies tracked high-dose users over longer periods than did the new study.
The researchers had been hired by the drug company Purdue Pharma LP, maker of the prescription painkiller OxyContin, to find out why abnormal liver tests were showing up in people testing a combination drug containing the acetaminophen and the opiate hydrocodone.
Purdue Pharma stopped its hydrocodone study early because of the abnormal liver tests. Researchers Watkins and Kaplowitz thought they would find the culprit in hydrocodone’s interaction with acetaminophen.
"Our jaws dropped when we got the data," Watkins said. "It doesn’t have anything to do with the opiate. It’s good ol’, garden-variety acetaminophen."
Acetaminophen is more popular than aspirin or ibuprofen. Each week, one in five
Acetaminophen is included in numerous over-the-counter and prescription medications, making overdose possible as people unwittingly combine drugs. Overdoses of acetaminophen are the leading cause of acute liver failure.
New research under way at the
About The Author:
Attorney Edward A. ("Ted") Bills can be reached at 719.444.1000 or at http://www.SpringsAttorney.com.
Attorney Ted Bills has one mission – to fight for the rights of personal injury victims and those who have been devastated by the misconduct of others – he represents clients with an aggressive approach designed to provide SWIFT justice.
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