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Dangerous skin reactions are not the only potentially deadly side effect of Tylenol and similar drugs that contain the chemical paracetamol (acetaminophen). Here are some other dangerous situations that can arise with its use.

Staggered Overdoses of Tylenol
Sometimes people try to take an overdose of Tylenol to commit suicide. A massive dose of the drug can "burn out" the liver, causing a slow and extremely painful death. In the UK, however, at least 168 people over the last 20 years have been treated for "staggered overdoses" of Tylenol, in which enough of the drug was taken to destroy the liver but not as part of a suicide attempt. In these cases, Britons simply tried to take enough Tylenol to get pain relief, but "enough" turned out to be a fatal overdose.
The toxic effects of Tylenol are cumulative. Taking a staggered overdose of the drug is actually more likely to cause severe toxic effects than taking a single, massive overdose of the medication, with more people needing to be put on ventilators or suffering brain damage if it is taken over a period of 24 hours or more.
Acetaminophen-Related Hearing Loss
Another complication of regular use of otherwise non-toxic doses of acetaminophen is hearing loss, especially in men who have not yet reached the age of 60. In a study of 26,197 men, researchers found that aking just a single dose of any medication in the class of drugs including acetaminophen (that is, who were taking any NSAID drug) twice a week increased the risk of hearing loss by 20%, and taking the medication on a regular basis for more than a year were 33% more likely to develop hearing loss, although the cumulative effects of the drug after one year were questionable. That is, taking acetaminophen pain relievers for more than one year did not make the effect even worse.
Brand-Specific Problems with Paracetamol
Perhaps because it is the world's best-selling brand of paracetamol (acetaminophen), some of the most severe problems with the medication have occurred with the Johnson & Johnson drug Tylenol. In 1982, seven people in the Chicago area died after taking Extra Strength Tylenol that turned out to have been laced with cyanide.
The company pulled all 31 million bottles of Tylenol from store shelves around the country in less than a week, and invented a triple-sealed tamper-proof safety container that allowed Johnson & Johnson to regain its 92% share of the American market. This incident led to the introduction of "child-proof" medication containers for most medications sold in the USA.
In January of 2010, Johnson & Johnson announced a recall of 20 different brands of its products containing Tylenol due to repeated reports of a musty smell that turned out to be due to contamination with a chemical called 2,4,6-tribromoanisole. There are no reports of toxic reactions to 2,4,6-tribromoanisole, but the company recalled its products just to be sure no would be made sick by it.
In April of 2010, Johnson & Johnson recalled 40 of its products after FDA inspectors found a hole in the ceiling covered by duct tape, spilling dust onto machinery below, at one of its manufacturing plants in Pennsylvania. And just a month later, in May of 2010, the FDA announced that certain children's Tylenol products had been contaminated with Burkholderia cepacia, a microorganism that is ordinarily harmless but that can cause serious infections in children who have cystic fibrosis.
Just to be clear, the new FDA warning is not specific to Johnson & Johnson products, and there is every indication that the company would promptly inform its customers if there were defects in its products. However, it is important to be on the lookout for skin reactions when taking any kind of paracetamol product, and it is best to take them only when they are needed, not on a regular basis.
- Curhan SG, Eavey R, Shargorodsky J, Curhan GC. Analgesic use and the risk of hearing loss in men. Am J Med. 2010 Mar.123(3):231-7. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2009.08.006.
- US Food and Drug Administration, FDA Drug Safety Communication: FDA warns of rare but serious skin reactions with the pain reliever/fever reducer acetaminophen. www.fda.gov, accessed 2 August 2013.
- Photo courtesy of TheGiantVermin by Flickr : www.flickr.com/photos/tudor/399387509/
- Photo courtesy of Katy Warner by Flickr : www.flickr.com/photos/sundazed/2277763683/