Women who take
paracetamol or ibuprofen just twice a week could be damaging their hearing
permanently.
Taking two painkillers
a week for more than six years has been linked with significant hearing loss,
with the drugs thought to cut blood supply to the inner ear and expose it to
noise damage.
As many as one in 20
women suffering partial deafness could blame their painkiller use, a study has
found.
The study, published in the Journal of Epidemiology, and first reported by DailyMailUK stated: “If this is a causal relation, it suggests that a substantial proportion of hearing loss attributable to use of analgesics (painkillers) is potentially preventable.”
The findings back up
similar research in men, suggesting middle-aged women, who commonly take
paracetamol and ibuprofen for headaches and back pain, should consider cutting
down.
Senior author Dr. Gary
Curhan, from Brigham and Women’s Hospital in the United States (U.S.), said:
“Hearing loss is extremely common and can have a profound impact on quality of
life.
“Finding modifiable
risk factors could help us identify ways to lower risk before hearing loss
begins and slow progression in those with hearing loss.”
Almost one in 12 women
take paracetamol on two days of every week, the US study found, usually to ward
off routine aches and pains. This could be only two pills over the two days, or
a greater dose.
But paracetamol, ibuprofen
and non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs taken this often for more than six
years raise the risk of developing hearing loss by nine per cent.
This was found by
examining 55,850 women between the age of 44 and 69 – almost half of whom
reported a hearing problem.
Around one in six
people in the United Kingdom (U.K.) have hearing problems, which can leave
people feeling cut off and lonely and has been found to speed up memory loss
and dementia.
The study suggests this
could be down to paracetamols, which most people think little of swallowing
routinely but evidence shows can reduce the blood supply to the cochlea, or
inner ear.
Paracetamol is also
believed to deplete antioxidants within the ear, making the cochlea more
vulnerable to noise-induced damage. Painkillers damage the tiny hairs within
the ear which help us hear and have been linked in younger and older women with
a higher risk of hearing loss.
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