Why pain killers are good temporally stabilizers of health

One of the active pain killer stabilizer is the acetaminophen (Tylenol) used in treatment of muscular and ligamentus strains and sprains. If you take an appropriate dose of acetaminophen to relieve pain associated with a soft tissue injury, you will likely be fine as long as you prioritize resting your body and not aggravating the injured area.

Sunday, December 19, 2010
It is best to rely on rest and the process of inflammation to heal an injured area (Internet Photo)

One of the active pain killer stabilizer is the acetaminophen (Tylenol) used in treatment of muscular and ligamentus strains and sprains.

If you take an appropriate dose of acetaminophen to relieve pain associated with a soft tissue injury, you will likely be fine as long as you prioritize resting your body and not aggravating the injured area.

However if you take acetaminophen as a temporary fix to allow you to continue to use the injured area, you stand a good chance of worsening your injury and even creating a chronically weak link in your body.

Acetaminophen primarily decreases registration of pain in your brain. It does not decrease inflammation outside of your central nervous system (brain and spinal cord).
So if you continue to burden injured tissues while taking acetaminophen to numb your senses, you will almost certainly prolong recovery time and possibly cause long term damage.

If complete rest is not possible and you absolutely must use an injured body part to some degree, the better choice is any over the counter pain medication that actually decreases inflammation throughout the body. Examples of pain killers that have system-wide anti-inflammatory properties are ibuprofen, naproxen, and aspirin.

But even with intake of any of these anti-inflammatory drugs, it is best that you take the lowest possible dose and do all you can to rest until the injured area is fully healed.
Inflammation is a process that you want to proceed in full force after experiencing any soft tissue injury. Inflammation brings blood, nutrients, white blood cells, and several natural chemicals that work together to repair injured tissues one cell at a time.

If you deny injured tissues a full bout of inflammation, it is quite possible that the tissues will not return to full strength, especially if they have been injured before. That is to say that by suppressing inflammation, you predispose an injured area to further injury.

When this principle is repeatedly ignored, the result is reduced strength and flexibility for the long term. This is why using ice to decrease inflammation in most cases of acute muscular or ligamentus injury is not recommended.

With severe or moderately severe injuries, after the first week or two of rest, it might be helpful to facilitate blood and lymphatic fluid flow through the injured area with contrast therapy.

But generally, it is best to rely on rest and the process of inflammation to heal an injured area. Ice or any other type of cryotherapy will always impede the health promoting effects of inflammation to some degree.

Inflammation that occurs as result of a muscular or ligamentus injury is quite different in nature from chronic inflammation that is caused by dietary and environmental factors.

Ibuprofen decreases inflammation throughout your body by minimizing the production of prostaglandins that can illicit inflammatory reactions.

Naproxen works body wide to decrease inflammation and produces longer lasting effects than any other class of over the counter pain killers.

Aspirin decreases pain, inflammation, and clot formation throughout the body. It is tougher on the esophagus and stomach than most other over the counter pain medications. Because of its effect on blood coagulation, it should not be taken in conjunction with other drugs that affect bleeding time.

When used in children who are experiencing a viral infection, aspirin may precipitate Reye’s syndrome, a potentially fatal condition.

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