Written
by Chukwuma Muanya
• NAFDAC,
FDA alert on drug’s adverse effects
• Urge
Nigerians to report cases to care provider
REGULAR
and indiscriminate intake of painkillers, especially Paracetamol, has been
blamed for the rising cases of heart attacks, stroke and early death.
A
study published Monday in the journal, Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, found
that patients prescribed high doses of the painkiller for long periods were up
to 63 per cent more likely to die unexpectedly.
The risk of having a heart attack or stroke was up to 68 per cent higher, and
there was an almost 50 per cent greater chance of having a stomach ulcer or
bleed.
The study added: “Given its high usage and availability, a systematic review of
Paracetamol’s efficacy and tolerability in individual conditions is warranted.”
Paracetamol is considered by doctors to be safer than Aspirin, which can cause
stomach bleeds, and ibuprofen, which has been linked to heart attacks and
strokes.
Paracetamol (also known as Acetaminophen) is the commonest available analgesic
and anti-pyretic. It is readily accessed from pharmacy, patent medicine and
provision shops as over the counter drug making it a potential drug of abuse,
especially in children.
A
tainted paracetamol, My Pikin, had in 2008 claimed over 39 lives.
Earlier studies had linked Paracetamol to the increasing cases of chronic
kidney and liver diseases in the country.
Also, the National Agency for Food Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and
the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had in 2013 alerted
Nigerians that Paracetamol had been associated with risk of rare but serious
skin reactions.
These skin reactions, known as Stevens - Johnson syndrome (SJS), toxic
epidermal necrolysis (TEN), and acute generalised exanthematous pustulosis
(AGEP), can be fatal. These reactions can occur with first time use of the drug
or at any time while it is being taken.
NAFDAC also encourages patients to report to their health care provider, who
will channel the complaint to the National Pharmacovigilance Centre, on
noticing any reaction after taking paracetamol tablets.
But British researchers who looked at studies involving 666,000 patients say
the risks may have been underestimated and are calling for a major review to be
conducted into the drug’s safety.
They think Paracetamol may be causing illness by preventing the action of an
enzyme in the body called COX-2.
Scientists from the Leeds Institute of Rheumatic and Musculoskeletal Medicine
looked at eight studies that contained information on patients taking
Paracetamol daily for up to 14 years, for conditions such as arthritis and
severe back pain.
They also covered patients who took the medicine less often or hardly at all.
Philip
Conaghan, who led the research, stressed that for most patients the risks were
very small and those given Paracetamol over a long period would have illnesses
likely to kill them early. For this reason, it was difficult to be sure the
drugs were causing problems.
But the professor added: “I am a bit worried that Paracetamol at high dose for
long periods could be associated with side effects that we hadn’t previously
associated.”
He
said that patients being prescribed the drugs for long periods for arthritis or
muscle and joint pain should talk to their doctors about alternative
treatments, such as exercise.
Conaghan
said it was not possible from the studies to work out how the average person’s
lifetime risk of a heart attack or stroke would increase if they took
Paracetamol for a long period.
According to Wikipedia, paracetamol toxicity is caused by excessive use or
overdose of the analgesic drug paracetamol. Mainly causing liver injury,
paracetamol toxicity is one of the most common causes of poisoning worldwide.
In the United States (U.S) and the United Kingdom(UK), it is the most common
cause of acute liver failure.
Many individuals with paracetamol toxicity may have no symptoms at all in the
first 24 hours following overdose. Others may initially have nonspecific
complaints such as vague abdominal pain and nausea. With progressive disease,
signs of liver failure may develop; these include low blood sugar, low blood
pH, easy bleeding, and hepatic encephalopathy. Some will spontaneously resolve,
although untreated cases may result in death.
Meanwhile, it is estimated that one in six men and one in 10 women will die
from heart attacks, strokes and other complications of heart disease. Other
scientists played down the risks.
Professor Nick Bateman, who specialises in clinical toxicology at the
University of Edinburgh, UK said: “Based on this study the risk is minimal.
Paracetamol remains the safest analgesic available, and this study should not
stop people taking it.
“Based on these results, the lowest effective dose for the shortest necessary
period is advised, this is common sense for all medicines.”
A
2013 Oxford study warned that for every 1,000 patients on ibuprofen or a
similar drug, three would suffer a heart attack within a year, of which one
would be fatal
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