Monday, April 21, 2008

Coffee and Acetaminophen: A Dangerous Combination

If you use Tylenol or another form of acetaminophen as a method of dealing with pain, you are probably aware that it can be very damaging to your liver. A newly released study gives preliminary evidence that drinking coffee while taking this drug can increase the hazards considerably. The study was not done directly on the human liver, so the results are not fully conclusive, but they do reveal that the use of caffeine and acetaminophen can be potentially hazardous.

This research is important, as caffeine and acetaminophen are two of the most highly used and abused drugs in this country. Natural remedies for pain such as magnesium oil, MSM, enzymes, flax seed oil, far infra red therapy, massage, hydrotherapy, herbs such as Boswellia, and relaxation techniques are much safer than the use of acetaminophen or any prescription or over-the-counter drug. As far as drinking coffee and other forms of caffeine goes, if one of your New Years resolutions (is it almost May already?) was to break the habit, perhaps it is time to reevaluate your intentions and finally take some action.


Taking Common Painkiller (acetaminophen) with Coffee is Extremely Toxic to the Liver
by David Gutierrez


(NaturalNews) Combining caffeine with the active ingredient in Tylenol (acetaminophen) may be extremely dangerous for the liver, according to new research conducted at the University of Washington and reported in the journal Chemical Research in Toxicology.

Researchers performed the study on E. coli bacteria that had been genetically modified to produce a human liver enzyme that breaks down the pain killing chemical paracetamol, also known as acetaminophen. A toxic byproduct of this enzyme's activity is what leads to liver damage in cases of paracetamol overdose.

When the scientists expose the bacteria to a large combined dose of caffeine and paracetamol, production of the toxic byproduct tripled. According to researchers, this translates to three times the risk of permanent liver damage.

According to British health expert Dr. Simon Thomas of the University of Newcastle, paracetamol is the culprit in 40 percents of drug overdoses in the United Kingdom, leading to 100 deaths or liver transplants yearly. But Thomas said that it would be hasty to draw too many conclusions about the human liver from a study conducted on bacteria.

"There are a million miles between E. coli and humans in terms of how paracetamol and caffeine are metabolized," he said.

Prior studies have shown that caffeine exacerbates paracetamol-induced liver damage in rats, and that mixing alcohol with the painkiller intensifies its effects on the liver. However, this is the first study to provide evidence that a mix of paracetamol and caffeine may be dangerous.

But the researchers noted that the doses they used in the study were enormous, and that there is as yet no evidence what dose would be required to be dangerous to humans. Because of this uncertainty, however, they advised caution in mixing the two drugs.

"The bottom line is that you don't have to stop taking acetaminophen or stop taking caffeine products, but you do need to monitor your intake more carefully when taking them together, especially if you drink alcohol," said researcher Sid Nelson.

http://www.naturalnews.com/z023073.html

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