Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: FFMCobalt
Tylenol may be easier on your stomach, but advil is better for you all around. Tylenol's being found to cause problems. Looking for a link...
I disagree. Advil is potentially quite nasty. It is well known to cause upset stomach, ulcers and internal bleeding. It can also cause kidney damage or exaccerbate heart problems.
Tylenol is very safe, with the exception of overdosage. Overdosage is a problem because it can cause severe liver damage. If you are a regular drinker (2 drinks a day or more), or are underweight, then you are at especially high risk of liver damage from overdose. Note that acetaminophen, the active ingredient, is found in lots of remedies, and over-the-counter hangover cures. If you don't check the ingredients carefully, you may accidentally overdose on it, and not even realise you have taken it in the first place! Medications like percocet, vicodin and lots of others contain a full dose of tylenol!
Tylenol has not been reported to cause liver injury at the recommended dose, expect in people with pre-existing severe liver disease, who have taken the max dose of tylenol daily for several weeks.
Originally posted by: SilentZero
Tylenol is a very safe drug....however, the point of this post was taking it for hangovers...in which case its not safe at all. Tylenol + alcohol = liver damage.
Originally posted by: MrsSkoorb
Tylenol IS okay after you have stopped drinking for about 12 hours...ie: the next day....
Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: SilentZero
Tylenol is a very safe drug....however, the point of this post was taking it for hangovers...in which case its not safe at all. Tylenol + alcohol = liver damage.
My point, earlier, was that there is no evidence for this statement.
There is good evidence that tylenol overdose + alcoholism = liver damage. In fact this is a very common cause of liver failure.
However, there is no compelling evidence that taking alcohol at the same time as tylenol increases its toxicity. Guidelines for the treatment of tylenol poisoning do not take into account recent alcohol consumption - only regular long-term alcohol consumption.
There is also no evidence that tylenol at normal dosage causes liver damage, except when people already have advanced liver-disease/cirrhosis.
There have been several cases of young people developing liver failure - which was initially attributed to taking tylenol and alcohol together. In every case, when these were investigated - these people, usually students, had daily alcholol consumption in the alcoholic range - and all had taken overdoses of tylenol (usually inadvertantly, becuase virtually all over-the-counter hangover cures contain tylenol as the active ingredient).
Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: SilentZero
Tylenol is a very safe drug....however, the point of this post was taking it for hangovers...in which case its not safe at all. Tylenol + alcohol = liver damage.
My point, earlier, was that there is no evidence for this statement.
There is good evidence that tylenol overdose + alcoholism = liver damage. In fact this is a very common cause of liver failure.
However, there is no compelling evidence that taking alcohol at the same time as tylenol increases its toxicity. Guidelines for the treatment of tylenol poisoning do not take into account recent alcohol consumption - only regular long-term alcohol consumption.
There is also no evidence that tylenol at normal dosage causes liver damage, except when people already have advanced liver-disease/cirrhosis.
There have been several cases of young people developing liver failure - which was initially attributed to taking tylenol and alcohol together. In every case, when these were investigated - these people, usually students, had daily alcholol consumption in the alcoholic range - and all had taken overdoses of tylenol (usually inadvertantly, becuase virtually all over-the-counter hangover cures contain tylenol as the active ingredient).