lincoona
Enthusiast
Reged: 11/24/04
Posts: 250
|
|
"According to a CNN report today, a study conducted by the National Institute of Health (NIH) on the possible usage of naproxen or arthritis drug Celebrex for the treatment of Alzehmiers disease revealed that naproxen users were more prone to cardiovascular problems."
http://www.newratings.com/new2/beta/article_581459.html
Sheesh, is everybody running scared or are we really being used as human Guinea Pigs? What's next, Dr. Pepper?
|
avonmonnj
Banned again
Reged: 10/25/04
Posts: 33
Loc: we wont get into that here
|
|
This drug is also popularly known as ALEVE.
I and many called this when VIOXX first got pulled. They are all in the same class of drugs, but the manufacturers contend that they are ALL different. LOL.
Anything but a percocet. Death is an acceptable side effect, not euphoria.
Andrea
Edited by avonmonnj (12/21/04 03:10 PM)
|
okdoki
Journeyman
Reged: 02/19/02
Posts: 57
|
|
Motrin,Aleve,and ketoprophen all over the counter raise blood pressure. I would think this could cause kidney and cardiovascular side effects,for people with blood pressure problems. But yet no warnings are put on them. Heaven forbid they sell a low dose codine product over the counter. You might end up sleeping on the sidewalk. But your kidneys and cadiovacular system would be ok!
Edited by okdoki (12/21/04 03:49 PM)
|
yadayada
Newbie
Reged: 04/14/02
Posts: 41
|
|
Sorry I probably shouldn't have posted this here but I got this info from www.worstpills.org .. It is a pay site However: if you click on the small numbers ie: (12) you can navigate the site and there is alot of info there.., anyway for anyone interested here it is.. yadayada
Dec. 17, 2004
Public Citizen to Call on FDA to Ban Celebrex and Bextra
Statement of Dr. Sidney Wolfe, Director of Public Citizens Health Research Group
Even before todays announcement by Pfizer about the heart attack risks associated with Celebrex, Public Citizens Health Research Group was preparing a petition to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to ban both Celebrex and the other Pfizer COX-2 drug, Bextra. In February 2001, we testified at an FDA advisory committee hearing that the cardiac risks of Celebrex (and Vioxx) demanded a black box warning for both drugs. Two months later, in the April 2001 issue of our newsletter Worst Pills, Best Pills News (now online at worstpills.org), we urged patients not to use either drug because there are safer alternatives.
Todays announcement by Pfizer is quite misleading because the company states that These clinical trial results are new. The cardiovascular findings in one of the studies (APC) are unexpected. Four years ago, after reviewing the results of the Pfizer-funded CLASS study, an FDA physician stated that the incidence of adverse events related to cardiac ischemia (decreased blood flow to the heart) was higher in the celecoxib [Celebrex] group ... and was most pronounced in the group of patients not taking ASA (aspirin) as a cardiovascular protective drug. In these patients, the rate of heart attack was also highest in the celecoxib group (0.2 percent) compared with users of the other two drugs (0.1 percent). For all patients, on and off aspirin, there was a higher incidence of atrial fibrillation, a type of heart rhythm disturbance, in the celecoxib group compared to those taking ibuprofen or diclofenac. Again this was more pronounced in the group not taking aspirin. Dr. Throckmorton concluded by stating that the data do not exclude a less apparent pro-thrombotic [blood clot-forming] effect of celecoxib, reflected in the relative rates of cardiac adverse events related to ischemia.
Even earlier evidence of the danger of Celebrex was published more than four years ago. In a study in the Aug. 29, 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the ability of rabbits to withstand temporary experimental coronary artery occlusion (experimental heart attack) was significantly impaired by treatment with celecoxib (Celebrex), which completely blocked the cardioprotective effects of the COX-2 enzyme. The authors of that study concluded that COX-2 enzyme is a cardioprotective protein. Therefore, it is implied, drugs that block this cardioprotective enzyme, such as COX-2 inhibitors, may neutralize the protective effects of this important enzyme.
The FDA should remove Celebrex and Bextra from the market immediately.
###
|