The association between acetaminophen and asthma: should its pediatric use be banned?

Expert Rev Respir Med

Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Respiratory and Allergy Unit, Hospital General Universitario Santa Lucía, University of Murcia School of Medicine, Cartagena, Spain.

Published: April 2013

During the last few decades, a huge epidemiological effort has been made all over the world in order to cast some light on the origin of asthma (or 'wheezing disorders' as a general term) and its recent increase in prevalence. The focus on genetic factors has failed to show any genetic signal strong enough to be seriously considered, and the tiny genetic signals found have never been appropriately replicated. The focus on environmental factors has provided some variable signals on the role of infections, allergens and bacterial substances, the direction of which have curiously varied from protecting to inducing asthma. The only environmental factor that has launched a large and consistent epidemiological signal, found in almost every epidemiological study addressing the issue, is previous acetaminophen exposure, which consistently increases the prevalence and clinical manifestations of every wheezing disorder under study. Is acetaminophen a real asthma promoter or an innocent bystander?

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1586/ers.13.8DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

association acetaminophen
4
asthma
4
acetaminophen asthma
4
asthma pediatric
4
pediatric banned?
4
banned? decades
4
decades huge
4
huge epidemiological
4
epidemiological effort
4
effort order
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!