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8th February 2022
12:21pm GMT

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The study revealed that blood pressure had risen significantly among those taking paracetamol within four days. The dose increased the average person's risk of a cardiac event by 20 per cent, reports the Telegraph.
Professor David Webb, chair of therapeutics and clinical pharmacology at the University of Edinburgh, said: "We have always thought that paracetamol was the safe alternative if we were trying to advise patients to stop using drugs like ibuprofen, which are known to raise blood pressure."
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Via Getty[/caption]
He added that consideration should be taken to stop prescribing paracetamol for those at risk of heart attacks or strokes and that low doses are prescribed to other patients, increasing in stages, "going no higher than needed to control pain".
One in 10 people take daily prescribed paracetamol for chronic pain, and an unknown number self-medicate with over-the-counter purchases.
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