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Using Ibuprofen for Cold Relief May Increase Heart Attack Risk

Using Ibuprofen for Cold Relief May Increase Heart Attack Risk
Using Ibuprofen for Cold Relief May Increase Heart Attack Risk

Taking ibuprofen or other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs to help relieve cold or flu symptoms may seem harmless, but new research suggests otherwise. It could increase the risk of heart attack.

Study co-author Dr. Cheng-Chung Fang of the National Taiwan University Hospital, and colleagues recently reported their findings in The Journal of Infectious Diseases.

Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are medications that help to alleviate pain by reducing inflammation.

Ibuprofen and aspirin are examples of two commonly used NSAIDs, and many individuals use these medications to help relieve some of the symptoms of a cold, flu, and other acute respiratory infections (ARIs), such as fever and headache, medicalnewstoday.com reported.

According to Fang and colleagues, previous research has suggested a link between the use of NSAIDs, ARIs, and an increased risk of heart attack.

However, the team notes that there have been no studies assessing whether NSAID use during ARI episodes is associated with a greater heart attack risk.

To investigate, researchers used data from Taiwan’s National Health Insurance Program to pinpoint 9,793 patients who had been hospitalized for a heart attack between 2007 and 2011.

Researchers assessed the risk of heart attack among patients in four different scenarios: during an ARI, during NSAID use, NSAID use during an ARI, and no exposure to NSAIDs or an ARI.

NSAID use alone was associated with a 1.5 times greater risk of heart attack, compared with no ARI or NSAID use, while an ARI alone increased the risk of heart attack by 2.7 times.

The risk of heart attack was greatest when patients used NSAIDs during an ARI, at 3.4 times higher. When NSAIDs were delivered intravenously in hospital during an ARI, the risk of heart attack was 7.2 times higher.

These findings are purely observational, so they cannot prove that NSAID use during ARI episodes directly increases the risk of heart attack.

However, the researchers recommend that doctors and patients apply caution when considering the use of NSAIDs for the relief of ARI symptoms.

“Physicians should be aware that the use of NSAIDs during an acute respiratory infection might further increase the risk of a heart attack.”

Dr. Fang adds that medications such as acetaminophen that alleviate pain may be safer alternatives during ARIs.

 

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