Use of acetaminophen may double asthma risk in teens
August 14th, 2010 - 12:42 pm ICT by ANIWashington, August 14 (ANI): A new study has suggested that even monthly use of the drug acetaminophen may more than double risk of asthma in adolescents compared to those who use none at all.
“This study has identified that the reported use of acetaminophen in 13- and 14 year old adolescent children was associated with an exposure-dependent increased risk of asthma symptoms,” said study first author Richard Beasley, M.D., professor of medicine, at the Medical Research Institute of New Zealand on behalf of the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC).
As part of the ISAAC program, two written questionnaires and one video questionnaire were administered to more than 300,000 13- and 14 year old children in 113 centers throughout 50 countries, asking them to quantify their use of acetaminophen (none, “medium”- at least once in the last year, or “high”- at least once in the last month) and their asthma, eczema and allergy symptoms.
There was a significant association between acetaminophen use and risk of asthma and eczema. For medium users the risk of asthma 43 percent higher than non-users; high users had 2.51 times the risk of non-users. Similarly, the risk of rhinoconjunctivitis (allergic nasal congestion) was 38 percent higher for medium users and 2.39 times as great for high users compared to non-users. For eczema, the relative risks were 31 percent and 99 percent respectively.
The research results will be published online on the American Thoracic Society’s Web site ahead of the print edition of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. (ANI)
- Use of Paracetamol may double asthma risk in teens - Aug 14, 2010
- Teenagers may develop asthma by taking paracetamol - Aug 14, 2010
- Paracetamol doubles teens' chances of getting asthma - Aug 15, 2010
- Sunshine likely to protect kids from eczema - Feb 05, 2012
- Babies given too much paracetamol risk asthma, eczema later - Sep 22, 2008
- Ibuprofen may reduce risk of Parkinson's disease - Mar 03, 2011
- School-based program helps teens cope with asthma - Dec 08, 2010
- Bedroom chemicals nearly double kids' allergy risk - Oct 21, 2010
- Kids with epilepsy 'more likely to have psychiatric symptoms' - Mar 26, 2011
- Paracetamol doubles risk of asthma in kids - Nov 30, 2010
- Omalizumab 'cuts seasonal asthma attacks in youth' - Mar 17, 2011
- Regular use of pain killers worsens hearing in men - Mar 02, 2010
- Allergy sufferers less likely to develop cancer - May 24, 2010
- Excessive computer use spurs risky behaviour among teens - Apr 26, 2011
- Asthmatic kids experience premature loss of lung function later in life - Jan 19, 2011
Tags: acetaminophen, adolescent children, adolescents, allergy symptoms, american journal of respiratory and critical care, american journal of respiratory and critical care medic, american thoracic society, asthma, asthma symptoms, author richard, critical care medicine, double risk, eczema, isaac program, medical research institute, nasal congestion, questionnaires, relative risks, respiratory and critical care medicine, richard beasley