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INReview INReview > The Scuttlebutt Lounge > Medicine, Science & Technology > Medicine & Biotech > Aleve tied to heart problems
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fuscia is Away
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Aleve tied to heart problems post #1  quote:



Aleve Tied to Heart Problems

MONDAY, Dec. 20 (HealthDayNews) -- The U.S. government announced Monday that it is halting the use of the popular painkiller Aleve in a clinical trial because of patients taking it had a higher risk of developing heart trouble.

It was the second time in as many workdays that the NIH suspended the use of an arthritis drug in a trial. On Friday, the agency said it was stopping the use of Celebrex in a trial on cancer patients.

Monday's announcement centered around a trial testing whether Aleve or Celebrex could prevent Alzheimer's disease. And while several recent studies have cast the family of drugs Celebrex belongs to in an unhealthy light, this is the first in which a trial using an over-the-counter arthritis drug was known to cause trouble.

Aleve and Celebrex are different types of nonsteroidal inflammatory inhibitors (NSAIDs). Celebrex and two other drugs that have been tied to heart trouble this year, Vioxx and Bextra, belong to a subset of stomach-friendly NSAIDs called cox-2 inhibitors.

Although participants in the Alzheimer's trial will no longer be taking either Aleve or Celebrex (celecoxib), they will continue to be monitored.

"We are suspending the use of the drugs within this trial," Dr. Elias Zerhouni, director of the National Institutes of Health, said at a news conference Monday evening. "The trial itself is not suspended and will continue."

Aleve (brand name naproxen) belongs to an older family of drugs known as cox-1 inhibitors.

The cox-2 class of drugs has fallen under a dark cloud. In September, Vioxx was pulled from the market due to an increased incidence of cardiovascular problems. Then on Friday, a trial involving another cox-2, Celebrex, was halted due to similar concerns among colorectal cancer patients. A third cox-2 inhibitor, Bextra, has also shown evidence of problems.

In the wake of the cox-2 revelations, many people had turned to the older cox-1 inhibitors for pain management. Naproxen has been on the market as a prescription drug since 1976 and as a lower-dose, over-the-counter drug (Aleve) since 1994.

The current trial, sponsored by the National Institute on Aging, was trying to determine if NSAIDs might have a preventive effect on Alzheimer's. About 2,500 participants were divided into three groups and randomly assigned to receive either 220 mg of naproxen twice a day, 200 mg of Celebrex twice a day, or a placebo, for up to three years.

Investigators had noticed a "weak signal" towards cardiovascular events in the naproxen arm, but also decided to suspend the use of drugs after the news about Celebrex broke last week.

"The events of last week and the news about celecoxib put things into a different light for us, because in part we found it very difficult to ask our participants to continue to stay on treatments when they knew that they had a chance of receiving Celebrex, about which there has been a lot of adverse publicity of late," said Dr. John Breitner, principal investigator of the study who is with the Veterans Affairs Medical Center and the University of Washington, both in Seattle.

Breitner said that the research team had noticed a 50 percent increased risk of cardiovascular events in naproxen patients, but cautioned that these were "small numbers." In all, 70 patients in the trial experienced heart attacks or strokes, out of a total of 2,500 people. There were about 23 deaths, about equally distributed across the three groups. In all, the risks did not approach those seen last week with Celebrex, Breitner added.

All of the participants were called over the weekend and instructed not to take any more medication.

Officials from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said the agency would assess what regulatory actions would be appropriate. "Suspending a research trial where a benefit is only potential in nature is very different from making a decision about whether a drug should stay on the market," Zerhouni stated.

"FDA advises patients who are currently taking over-the-counter naproxen to carefully follow the instructions on the label," said Dr. Steven Galson, head of the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. "Patients should not exceed the recommended doses for naproxen, and no longer than 10 days."

Naproxen is also contained in prescription products, Galson added. Individuals taking these products should consult with their physicians.


Old Post 12-21-2004 02:26 AM
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post #2  quote:

This is just horrible news to me. I have to take rx naproxen frequently for my hands. I take over the counter stuff at least 4 times a month. Now there is nothing that can really help me.

Old Post 12-21-2004 02:27 AM
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post #3  quote:

quote:
fuscia said this in post #2 :
This is just horrible news to me. I have to take rx naproxen frequently for my hands. I take over the counter stuff at least 4 times a month. Now there is nothing that can really help me.




Check with your local privately owned "Healthfood" store. Describe your problem and see if they have something non-toxic that may help you. Ask for the Owner.


Old Post 12-21-2004 03:16 AM
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post #4  quote:

Don't panic yet, the reason they are dangerous is because of the risk of a heart problem. It is extremely low. It is an alternative to Asperin and Asperin kills 16,000 people a year. These new drugs like the one in question reduce that number not increase it.


"Those who know nothing of Islam pretend that Islam counsels against war. Those who say this are witless." ~Ayatollah Khomeini
Old Post 12-21-2004 01:23 PM
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post #5  quote:

I hope that the study is wrong. It is the only thing that works for my pain other than codeine.

Old Post 12-21-2004 04:15 PM
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