Monday, September 26, 2016

HEALTH / MEDICINE SPECIAL... PARACETAMOL: HOW SAFE IS MY PAINKILLER?

PARACETAMOL: HOW SAFE IS MY PAINKILLER?
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Paracetamol sales surge each year across India, during seasonal flu, dengue and chikungunya outbreaks, because it is the safest drug for fever and pain. Compared to aspirin and other popular NSAIDS (non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs that treat pain and inflammation) such as ibuprofen and naproxen, it has fewer side effects and does not raise the risk of bleeding associated with dengue and fevers of unknown origin.
What most people don’t know is that paracetamol (acetaminophen in the US and Canada) overdose, along with alcohol abuse, is among the leading causes of acute liver failure in the US, Canada, UK and Australia. And almost half of the hospitalisations and deaths associated with the painkiller are from accidental overdoses.
In India, where few people are vaccinated against the liver-damaging Hepatitis A and B (infections that spread through contaminated blood), food and water are the biggest cause of liver damage, followed by alcohol abuse, liver cancer, haemochromatosis (a genetic condition that leads to over-absorption of iron in the liver), and drug toxicities, mostly paracetamol overdose.

HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH?
Paracetamol is widely used to treat headaches and minor aches and pains from the common cold, viral and bacterial infections, toothache, sprains, strains and menstrual cramps. It is also a component of hundreds of widely used over-the-counter medicines and syrups, including cold and cough medicines.
This often leads to people unwittingly taking more than the safe daily dose, which is capped at 4,000 mg (eight tablets of 500 mg each). Selling the drug in smaller quantities in blister packs, as in the UK and India, helps prevent overdose — intentional and accidental — by making it difficult for a person in pain too many.
Toxicity occurs when the drug builds up in the bloodstream faster than it can be cleared by the body. In most people, small amounts of paracetamol are broken down into non-toxic forms and secreted in the urine, but more than the maximum amount can cause the built-up byproducts to disrupt liver function.

DRUG TOXICITY
Though physicians are supposed to voluntarily report adverse drug reactions to the Directorate General of Health Services in India, this is rarely done.
Canada, with a population of 35 million, reported 4,500 hospitalisations due to paracetamol overdose, shows Health Canada data, which is asking for stricter labelling. The northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, with a population of more than 200 million, has reported none.

AM I AT RISK?
There’s a very clear threshold for what constitutes a safe dose, which has led to regulatory bodies across the world, including in India, to recommend adults have no more than 4,000 mg a day. People with compromised livers — whether because of three or more alcoholic (30 ml) drinks for men and two for women every day, or undiagnosed liver infection or damage — should have it in doses lower than the recommended limit. In children, taking slightly more than the therapeutic dose over long periods can also cause toxicity. The symptoms of toxicity depend on how much paracetamol is in your blood. More than 50% of people with underlying liver disease have no symptoms, with signs of damage often showing up in late-stage liver disease. It usually begins with vomiting and stomach ache and progresses to jaundice (yellowing of the whites of the eyes and of the skin due to high levels of bilirubin, a yellow pigment found in bile), dark urine, pale or light-coloured stool, mental confusion, and retention of fluids in the abdomen or belly. Untreated, this can lead to liver failure and death.

SECOND CHANCES
On the upside, the liver is the only human organ that regenerates, which can help reverse damage by replacing scar tissue with new cells.
After infections — such as the food- and water-borne Hepatitis E that causes sporadic jaundice outbreaks in India — the liver can completely repair itself within a month, if there are no complications.
Complications occur when the regeneration is either incomplete, prevented by progressive development of scar tissue within the liver, or if the damage is sudden, in which more than 50% of the liver cells have been killed over three to four days.
This usually happens with paracetamol overdose. In this situation, the damaging agent such as a virus, medicine or alcohol continues its attack on the liver and scars the tissue, which cannot be healed. This causes cirrhosis, which is a late-stage disease that kills if the person doesn’t get a liver transplant.


sanChita sharma

HT19SEP16

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