More Research Required

Weird:

Acetaminophen, also known as paracetamol and sold widely under the brand names Tylenol and Panadol, may also increase risk-taking, according to research from 2020 that measured changes in people’s behavior when under the influence of the medication.

This seems a suspicious. The drug has been in use for decades and this side effect is just now being discovered? Maybe. But it going to need more study to seriously convince people.

To add to the suspicion, the study was done in 2020 and this article is just a rehash of that six year old study.

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6 thoughts on “More Research Required

  1. At my advanced age, I use it when I know I will be engaged in some sort of physical activity that will otherwise hurt. So I suppose it becomes risky.

  2. It is easily believable that some kind of fairly mild effect that is also as subtle as “risk-taking” (what all could that include? I’ve seen silly stuff) would not show up without VERY large studies over a fairly long period of time.

    Of course, something that mild also seems very unlikely to be a major concern point, more of a click chase.

    So yeah, *something* doesn’t add up about it.

    Richard’s point, above, could also explain it quite easily if there are insufficient controls or other weaknesses in the study… that someone is then using to chase clicks.

  3. https://www.adventhealth.com/news/hidden-dangers-tylenol-insights-dr-mauricio-orrego#:~:text=Acetaminophen%20is%20one%20of%20the,risks%20if%20not%20used%20responsibly.

    Tylenol has a bad name around the world everywhere but the US. Even here long term usage has known severe side effects

    “Long-term or high-dose use of Tylenol (acetaminophen) carries significant risks, primarily severe liver damage, which can lead to liver failure, transplant, or death. Adults should not exceed 4,000 mg in 24 hours, though long-term use should be lower, typically avoiding more than 3,000 mg/day, especially when consumed daily or near daily. ”
    Food and Drug Administration (.gov)
    Food and Drug Administration (.gov)
    +4

    • Sure… but that’s been known a long time, and that is not this. The question is, where did this suddenly come from? It seems odd and a bit “sus”.

      (Also, acetaminophen is pretty much the only thing available for people with severe allergy to aspirin and other NSAIDs, so to some extent, well, it’s that or nothing for that subset of the population, bad reputation or not.)

  4. The last time I took Tylenol, the only risk was getting off the couch to head for the crapper. I wasn’t sure which end would cut loose first. I guess that could be risk taking if I guessed wrong.

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