Pills you pop every day could be causing serious damage in the long run.
Aspirin is hailed as a miracle drug, and there's not a person among
us who hasn't popped an ibuprofen or acetaminophen to deal with achy
joints or a crushing headache.
But if you're doing that every day, you could be causing long-term
damage to your health, says Gary Kaplan, DO, medical director of the
Kaplan Center for Integrative Medicine and author of a new book called Total Recovery: Solving the Mystery of Chronic Pain and Depression.
"The biggest misconception people have about over-the-counter
painkillers is that they're completely safe and harmless," says Dr.
Kaplan. "They are neither of the above." In fact, most over-the-counter
painkillers started out as prescription drugs but now are sold at lower
doses without your needing to talk to a doctor.
And they're all bad in their own way. While Dr. Kaplan does contend
that low doses of aspirin (81 milligrams) do have some benefits for
people with risk factors for stroke, heart disease and some forms of
cancer, larger doses taken daily to deal with the pains of daily living
do not. "People pop these things like it's no big deal," he says. "If
you do this every day, in the majority of people, you're doing real
damage."
Before getting into what that damage is, it helps to understand how
these medications work. Aspirin, ibuprofen (sold as Advil and Motrin),
and naproxen sodium (sold as Aleve) all fall into a class of drugs
called nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories, or NSAIDs. They work by
inhibiting prostaglandin, a hormone that can produce pain and
inflammation in response to an infection or injury. Acetaminophen (or
Tylenol) falls into a different category and seems to interrupt the pain
messages your brain receives.
#1: Gut ulcerations
NSAIDs, particularly ibuprofen and aspirin, are rough on your stomach,
and they're just as rough on the lining of your gut. They create
ulcerations and inflammation in the gut lining, damage that causes
something known as a "leaky gut." When your gut is leaky, it doesn't
absorb nutrients, which can lead to deficiencies (which can also
contribute to pain problems), and problematic proteins and allergens,
such as gluten, soy, or egg proteins, can escape, triggering food
sensitivities. "Your gut is a very sophisticated filter," Dr. Kaplan
says. "It's a very complex organ that's not one to disrupt, but one that
we disrupt all the time."
Furthermore, NSAIDs disrupt the gut bacteria that control your immune
system. As a result, you get sick more frequently and you might develop
more chronic ailments.
Sixty to 80 percent of people develop gut inflammation within 24
hours of taking an NSAID, Dr. Kaplan says, and 50 to 70 percent of
people who take them long term will develop chronic small intestine
inflammation. And initially that might present as just feelings of
bloating, gas or changes in your bowel movements, but over time, you
might start experiencing chronic fatigue or develop food intolerances.
#2: Liver damage
Acetaminophen doesn't cause
those gut ulcerations, Dr. Kaplan says. Rather, its problem is that it
will damage your liver--sometimes, in unexpected ways. Things like
alcohol can interfere with the way your body breaks down acetaminophen,
even if you're taking a normal dose. "That leads to the potential to get
a toxic level of acetaminophen in your system, which leads to liver
damage," Dr. Kaplan says. He's also found that taking too many
painkillers that contain caffeine can stress out your liver and
interfere with sleep.
#3: Kidney damage
Along with your stomach, your kidneys are a major production site of
prostaglandins, the hormones that NSAIDs are designed to silence. In
addition to controlling the acid secretions in your stomach,
prostaglandins help the kidneys fulfill their function of removing
proteins and waste from your blood. Too many prostaglandin-inhibiting
NSAIDs can interfere with that process, leading to kidney damage and a
buildup of toxic waste by-products in your bloodstream. "As soon as we
start seeing damage to kidneys, we tell people to get off all
anti-inflammatory medications," Dr. Kaplan says.
Furthermore, prostaglandin produces inflammation in response to
damage your body is experiencing. "Inflammation is not always a bad
thing," he adds. "It's critical for repair--inflammation cleans up
damaged tissue and brings in new cells to repair it. When inflammation
gets disrupted, the normal healing process gets disrupted."
#4: Heart disease
You may remember a
prescription painkiller called Vioxx that was pulled from the market a
few years ago. The reason? It caused heart attacks, and it's not the
only one. "It's a lower risk than with Vioxx, but all NSAIDs pose a
risk," says Dr. Kaplan. NSAIDs block an enzyme called COX-2, which works
with prostaglandin to protect your arteries. When both are silenced by
chronic use of over-the-counter painkilllers, your risk of heart disease
increases.
#5: Hypersensitization
Here's an ironic fact:
Painkillers can heighten your susceptibility to pain. While this
phenomenon has been seen mostly with prescription opiods (such as
Vicodin or Oxycontin), studies have shown that acetaminophen and NSAIDs
can have the same effect on headaches. "It's called a rebound headache,"
Dr. Kaplan says. "They dull your response to pain, so you need more
medications to get to the same place. And you end up developing
increased sensitivity to pain."
So are we all supposed to just grin and bear it if we have a headache
or a sore knee? "The occasional use is fine, less than once a week,"
Dr. Kaplan advises. "But if you have pain that requires that you take
over-the-counter pain medication on a regular basis, you need to seek
medical attention."
Ultimately, Dr. Kaplan's beef with painkillers is that they aren't
dealing with deeper health issues. "Doctors have to start looking at
pain as a symptom and not the disease," he says. "We're better off
addressing the problem. We need to understand where the pain is coming
from."
Original article at:
By Emily Main, Rodalenews.com
By Emily Main, Rodalenews.com
By Emily Main, Rodalenews.com
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