Tylenol alert!!

HuskyBuck

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I’ll take a wild stab that Tylenol refused to be shaken down hence the “link” to autism. Lol.
 
The Throbber was completely underwhelmed at the Tylenol announcement.
Do better, RFKJ.
Remove the liability exemption for vaccines on Big Pharma and require absolute disclosure (like 4 minutes worth) on all pharma advertising.
 
I had a real laugh out loud reading idiots Trump and Kennedy espousing dangers of venerable Tylenol.
 
I had a real laugh out loud reading idiots Trump and Kennedy espousing dangers of venerable Tylenol.
Why do you think you ended up autistic? Curiosity, since you’re clearly on that end of the autism spectrum.
 
This was actually known / suspected 3 years ago. It is 100% correlated to ADHD in kids, too.
I knew at least one trumptard was buying this.
Take it up with UW Medicine, fucktard.

Child ADHD risk linked to mother’s use of acetaminophen - UW Medicine | Newsroom
This study was very very limited and maybe does a little to just get funding for a broader study.

This work should be considered in the context of several limitations. First, we only included Black/African American women in the Urban South, limiting generalizability, but also enhancing data for a group traditionally underrepresented in research. Second, our sample size was small, particularly for RNA sequencing, which only included 174 placentas. Third, we measured expression using bulk RNA sequencing. Single-cell transcriptomics could additionally capture toxicant-associated changes in the relative abundance and/or impairment of specific cell types78. Fourth, we used a one-time measurement of metabolites in maternal blood during pregnancy to characterize APAP exposure. A single time point measurement is more likely to capture frequent compared with sporadic users, and APAP use during one time point could correlate with use at other time points in pregnancy. Thus, our results should not be interpreted as pinpointing the second trimester as a window of high susceptibility. The literature suggests that the third trimester may be a more relevant window of APAP susceptibility in relation to neurodevelopment12,13. This could be a consequence of the peak brain growth spurt that occurs in the third trimester79, or because APAP used by the mother during the immediate pre-partum period may be left to newborns with underdeveloped capacities to metabolize it80. Additionally, the prevalence of individuals with APAP biomarkers detected in our study probably underestimates the prevalence of APAP use throughout all of pregnancy. Finally, while we adjusted for multiple potential sources of confounding, unobserved confounding is always possible in observational epidemiologic studies.

…. So they basically just come out and admit it, "not be interpreted as"… conclusive.
 
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It doesn't look like whoever wrote that article even went to the limitations section. Those sections are in most scientific papers.
 
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This was actually known / suspected 3 years ago. It is 100% correlated to ADHD in kids, too.
I knew at least one trumptard was buying this.
Take it up with UW Medicine, fucktard.

Child ADHD risk linked to mother’s use of acetaminophen - UW Medicine | Newsroom
This study was very very limited and maybe does a little to just get funding for a broader study.

This work should be considered in the context of several limitations. First, we only included Black/African American women in the Urban South, limiting generalizability, but also enhancing data for a group traditionally underrepresented in research. Second, our sample size was small, particularly for RNA sequencing, which only included 174 placentas. Third, we measured expression using bulk RNA sequencing. Single-cell transcriptomics could additionally capture toxicant-associated changes in the relative abundance and/or impairment of specific cell types78. Fourth, we used a one-time measurement of metabolites in maternal blood during pregnancy to characterize APAP exposure. A single time point measurement is more likely to capture frequent compared with sporadic users, and APAP use during one time point could correlate with use at other time points in pregnancy. Thus, our results should not be interpreted as pinpointing the second trimester as a window of high susceptibility. The literature suggests that the third trimester may be a more relevant window of APAP susceptibility in relation to neurodevelopment12,13. This could be a consequence of the peak brain growth spurt that occurs in the third trimester79, or because APAP used by the mother during the immediate pre-partum period may be left to newborns with underdeveloped capacities to metabolize it80. Additionally, the prevalence of individuals with APAP biomarkers detected in our study probably underestimates the prevalence of APAP use throughout all of pregnancy. Finally, while we adjusted for multiple potential sources of confounding, unobserved confounding is always possible in observational epidemiologic studies.

…. So they basically just come out and admit it, "not be interpreted as"… conclusive.
There are multiple studies on Tylenol and links to ADHD. You might want to do more research before assuming you're right because big pharma says so. I'm sure you will ignore the facts I'm dropping on your head because you seem like the type who will not admit to being wrong.
https://www.mountsinai.org/about/newsroom/2025/mount-sinai-study-supports-evidence-that-prenatal-acetaminophen-use-may-be-linked-to-increased-risk-of-autism-and-adhd
Mount Sinai Study Supports Evidence That Prenatal Acetaminophen Use May Be Linked to Increased Risk of Autism and ADHD
Researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai have found that prenatal exposure to acetaminophen may increase the risk of neurodevelopmental disorders, including autism spectrum disorder and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), in children. The study, published today in BMC Environmental Health, is the first to apply the rigorous Navigation Guide methodology to systematically evaluate the rigor and quality of the scientific literature.

The study was conducted in collaboration with the University of California, Los Angeles; University of Massachusetts Lowell; and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
 
bleach:
I did. It's indeterminate. It reminds me of the lifelong reports that such and such may cause cancer. Well, everything may happen.
 
the Make Polio Great Again gals would rather believe the man who can't even pronounce acetaminophen.

Research doesn’t show using Tylenol during pregnancy causes autism. Here are 5 things to know
A 2025 Mount Sinai study that reviewed some existing research concluded the available evidence supported an association between prenatal acetaminophen exposure and increased incidence of neurodevelopmental disorders.
But the largest study on this topic, from 2024, found no evidence supporting an increased risk of autism, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder or intellectual disability associated with acetaminophen use during pregnancy.
The 2024 study is one of the two highest quality studies on the topic, Zahn said, and neither found an association between acetaminophen use and adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes.
What does this mean for confused parents? Associations between acetaminophen and autism are “based on limited, conflicting, and inconsistent science and is premature given the current science,” according to the Autism Science Foundation.
There’s yet another wrinkle: the potential for “publication bias,” a phrase that describes when scientific publications avoid publishing findings that don’t show significant associations. That means studies that don’t find an association between autism and acetaminophen are less likely to be accepted for publication, said Dr. Judette Louis, dean of Old Dominion University’s medical school and chair of the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine publications committee.
 
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