Are you saying that despite not getting you high it’s the primary cause of acute liver failure in the world, over alcoholism, because it’s such a good placebo?
OD, or having a pre-existing liver condition or taking other medication with acetaminophen that causes you to inadvertently OD on it.
It’s true that the rates of OD are high for Acetaminophen, but if you don’t have or do any of the above, it’s safe.
Just take the recommended dose at the recommended schedules, not 20, and stop + see a doctor if your pain doesn’t get better. It’s not usually meant to treat chronic pains, and neither is Ibuprofen.
stop + see a doctor if your pain doesn’t get better. It’s not really meant to treat chronic pains, and neither is Ibuprofen.
Thank you for the advice, but as someone with chronic pain, my doctor(s) do recommend I take it fairly regularly, though generally when my pain reaches more acute, flare-up levels. I use medicinal cannabis for the chronic stuff.
Paracetamol has not been proven to relieve pain more than a placebo. Ibuprofen is the real deal.
I don’t see them selling Ibuprofen ice cream
In managing arthritic pain, according to Global News, who do not appear to cite sources.
It is otherwise known to work for most people.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/acetaminophen-no-better-than-placebo-for-back-pain-study-finds/
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20236342/
I did find a study about its inefficacy in treating lower back pain, however, but that’s about it.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25064594/
If placebo works, who cares lol
I’m gonna go forget this and enjoy using paracetamol for headaches :)
Are you saying that despite not getting you high it’s the primary cause of acute liver failure in the world, over alcoholism, because it’s such a good placebo?
Wait is that from people ODing on it? Or from normal usage?
OD, or having a pre-existing liver condition or taking other medication with acetaminophen that causes you to inadvertently OD on it.
It’s true that the rates of OD are high for Acetaminophen, but if you don’t have or do any of the above, it’s safe.
Just take the recommended dose at the recommended schedules, not 20, and stop + see a doctor if your pain doesn’t get better. It’s not usually meant to treat chronic pains, and neither is Ibuprofen.
Thank you for the advice, but as someone with chronic pain, my doctor(s) do recommend I take it fairly regularly, though generally when my pain reaches more acute, flare-up levels. I use medicinal cannabis for the chronic stuff.
Then such is your doctor’s advice, it takes precedence over general advice :)
Maybe before naproxen was invented.