Harvard Medical School explains that the main risk of liver damage from acetaminophin is from large doses, “but there are reports of people developing liver problems after taking small to moderate amounts of acetaminophen for long periods of time. Drinking alcohol while taking acetaminophen can also cause liver damage.”
What happens to the liver exactly? The Mayo Clinic says exposure to too much medication can cause toxic hepatitis, an inflammation in the liver. When the liver breaks down drugs and chemicals in the bloodstream, the byproducts of the process could hurt the organ. Constant exposure to those dangerous byproducts can cause the inflammation, which could permanently damage the liver by scarring it or sending it into organ failure. “In some cases, toxic hepatitis develops within hours or days of exposure to a toxin,” the organization says. “In other cases, it may take months of regular use before signs and symptoms appear.”
While much health literature refers specifically to the potential of acetaminophen to cause liver damage, ibuprofen, the active ingredient in Advil and Motrin, appears to do the same in some rare cases. Motrin, for example, advises people on its warning label to seek a doctor’s advice before taking the medication if they have liver cirrhosis, a condition marked by tissue scarring. However, the U.S. National Library of Medicine explains that ibuprofen is one of the safest and most easily tolerated nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, also known as NSAIDs. Still, it can “rarely cause clinically apparent and serious acute liver injury,” the federal institute says. But most of those cases might be attributable to an “immunoallergic” reaction and most ibuprofen overdoses do not present with liver injury.
To avoid liver damage associated with any pain reliever, the FDA advises following recommended dosage guidelines.
source : Medical Daily (http://www.medicaldaily.com/)
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