If Tylenol is as dangerous as you outline, why would a hospital administer it?
Hospitals won't give you a dangerous dose, but I'm fucked if I know why they use it at all. Many people get little-to-no pain relief from Tylenol; I'm one of 'em. It reduces a fever just fine, but that's all it does for me. I've asked nurses before and gotten non-answers, so there's something they're not saying, like "it works by placebo effect, mostly".
I can't get the whole article from MedScape, but here's a quote:
"Acetaminophen toxicity is primary cause of drug overdose related–liver failure in the United States."
Again, that's at higher levels than a hospital would ever prescribe, over 4,000mg per day.
Here's an article from Harvard Medical School - in plain English, not medical-ese:
https://www.health.harvard.edu/pain/acetaminophen-safety-be-cautious-but-not-afraid
Correction....
Alka Selzer Cold & Flu.
These are the best.
I swear by them. They help mask the symptoms so much. The just knock my rear end on the couch for some sleep though.
Pretty much the same, as it still has 325mg Tylenol. Don't take more than 10 pills per day. You might think about adding 600 to 800mg of guaifenesin to make the mucus more fluid, if that's a problem. You can get it in that dosage (generic, OTC) from most pharmacies. When my sinuses are packed up, I take 1200mg horse-pill caplets of guaifenesin from Walgreens (Mucus Relief ER).
« Last Edit: May 25, 2019, 10:33:27 PM by RopeFiend »
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