Study: Acetaminophen, ibuprofen may boost high blood
pressure risk
The Associated Press
Monday, November 4, 2002
CHICAGO - The popular pain relievers
ibuprofen and acetaminophen, contained in scores of over-the-counter
remedies, may increase the risk of high blood pressure, a study in women
suggests.
Skeptics say the link is
flimsy and needs confirmation in better-designed studies, and even the
Harvard researchers who conducted the study do not recommend that people
stop taking the medications. But the authors add that their findings are
plausible given what's known about how the drugs affect the body.
The study, in today's
Archives of Internal Medicine, involved 80,020 women aged 31 to 50 who
participated in a nurses' health study and had not been diagnosed with
high blood pressure at the outset. They were asked in 1995 about their use
of painkillers; information about high blood pressure was obtained from a
survey two years later.
During those two years,
16540 participants developed high blood pressure. Women who reported
taking acetaminophen 22 days a month or more were twice as likely to
develop hypertension as women who did not use the drug. Those who used nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory medicines that often- mostly ibuprofen- were 86 percent
more likely to develop hypertension than nonusers.
Acetaminophen is
contained in Tylenol and ibuprofen is in Motrin, two of the most popular
over-the-counter painkillers.
While the relative risks sound high, the results suggest
that the vast majority of women taking the medications will not develop high
blood pressure, said Dr. William J. Elliott, an internal medicine and
pharmacology specialist at Rush-Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center in
Chicago.