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A large study of more than 6.3 million adults found that common painkillers could increase the risk of stroke and heart attack by 50 percent, calling for a ban on over-the-counter purchases. The study is published in the new issue of the British Medical Journal.
, the large-scale study found that bichlorofenic acid, sold in the U.S. under brands such as Voratron and Soraz, also put patients at higher risk of gastrointestinal bleeding than other painkillers. Bichlorofenic acid is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) used to relieve fever or toothache in adults, or severe joint pain in children. British regulators banned the drugs from being sold as over-the-counter drugs in 2015 over concerns about heart health.
" bichlorofenic acid should not be bought over the counter and should be prescribed with an appropriate frontal package to warn of its potential risks. The team at Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark said it was time to recognize the potential health risks of bichlorofentanil and reduce its use.
in the study, a team led by Dr. Morten Schmidt analyzed national registration data for more than 6.3 million Danish adults. All of these patients took prescription drugs for at least a year before the study began in January 1996. The average age of participants taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs was between 46 and 49 years old, while those who took paracetamol, another painkiller, had an average age of 56.
researchers found that even low-dose patients increase the risk of heart attack and stroke. Compared to ibuprofen, fentanyl, or paracetamol, bichlorofenic acid occurred within 30 days of starting treatment with heart problems and complications such as irregular heartbeat, ischemic stroke, heart failure, and a significant increase in the rate of heart attacks. The study found that taking dichlorofensic acid increased significantly over time compared to taking other drugs and not taking drugs at all: those who started the study at a low risk and then took dichlorofenic acid had an average of one more heart attack or stroke than those who took the paracetamol; those who took the drug at no other level had a heart attack or stroke; (Yang Liping/Compilation)Source:
(1) Daily Mail:
Common saper saper saper sstroke and heart attack by 50 percent, new study finds, leading to calls for ban on-over-the-counter purchases
.