A
new study found that as many as 15%of adults are taking more than the
recommended dose of ibuprofen on a regular basis
|
●Americans take an
estimated 30 billion doses of ibuprofen and similar drugs a year ●A new study from Boston
University found that 15%of Americans are taking more than the recommended
dose ●Too much of these
painkillers can cause stomach bleeding and heart attacks
Too many people are
taking too many anti-inflammatory painkillers, a new study reveals.
DAILY MAIL UK report continues:
Ibuprofen
and similar drugs are great for all kinds of aches and pains, but too much of a
good thing, in this case, can be deadly by causing ulcers and digestive tract
bleeding.
New
research from Boston University found that 15% of adults take more than the
recommended daily maximum of the pills.
Many
people also take the drug every day, a worrisome habit that could contribute
the slow erosion of gastrointestinal walls.
Across
the board, it seems Americans have an unhealthy relationship to
painkillers.
Americans
take an estimated 30 billion doses of over the counter or prescription drugs
similar to ibuprofen every year.
While
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like ibuprofen are not addictive
like more potent opioids painkillers, they are not without their own dangerous
side effects.
'The
attitude that users can choose their own dose regardless of label directions,
along with poor knowledge of dosing limits, is associated with exceeding the
daily limit,' said lead study author Dr David Kaufman.
Pain
is most often cause by inflammation which is an immune system response to
tissue damage or foreign invaders into the body.
Ibuprofen,
like all NSAIDs, blocks the production of certain enzymes that then in turn
would fuel the production of chemicals, called prostaglandins, to cause
inflammation.
But
some of the chemicals in the prostaglandin family ensure that the stomach is
coated in protective mucus to keep digestive acids from irritating or even
eating away at the organ tissue.
So
the more inflammation blocking ibuprofen you take, the more protection is being
stripped away from the stomach.
'These
drugs can have serious side effects, including gastrointestinal bleeding and
heart attacks, and are often taken without medical oversight because many
products are available over-the-counter,' Dr Kaufman said.
For
the study, 1,326 people who reported taking ibuprofen in the previous month
completed online medication diaries every day for one week.
All
of the participants took ibuprofen during the week, and 87%of them only used
over-the-counter, or nonprescription, versions, researchers report in
Pharmacoepidemiology & Drug Safety.
Overall,
55%of participants took ibuprofen at least three days during the week, and 16
percent took it every day.
In
addition to ibuprofen, 37% of the participants reported taking at least one
other NSAID during the week, most often aspirin or naproxen. Less than half of
them recognized that all of the products they were taking were NSAIDs.
Combining
multiple forms of an NSAID - especially unwittingly can increase the risk of
stomach ulcers or damage.
Though
recommended dosage is up to a doctor's discretion, it is generally recommended
that adults take no more than 3200mg divided over the course of the day, or up
to 400mg of ibuprofen every four to six hours.
The
participants' frequent overdosing could dangerously deprive them of protective
stomach coating.
One limitation of the study is that researchers only focused on recent and current ibuprofen users, which may not reflect what doses might be typical for sporadic or new users, the authors note.
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