DrDeth
January 24, 2006, 2:47am
21
Hmm, but there might be something an MD could be doing to help his liver. Can you help us here, **Qadgop the Mercotan? **
So what should people be popping after the occasional night of heavy drinking?
Hey, I’d check a patient’s liver functions, and if they were normal, I’d advise them to never consume more than 4 grams of tylenol in 24 hours, or more than 1 gram every 6 hours, don’t mix it with alcohol, and play nice.
You have normal patients?
DrDeth
January 24, 2006, 4:38am
25
Hey, I’d check a patient’s liver functions, and if they were normal, I’d advise them to never consume more than 4 grams of tylenol in 24 hours, or more than 1 gram every 6 hours, don’t mix it with alcohol, and play nice.
Good general advice.
But if there is some damage- is there anything that can be done to get the liver better?
For your enjoyment, Cecil also had a column on this very subject a few years back:
http://www.straightdope.com/columns/000929.html
The real problem with drugs like Tylenol is that the difference between a therapeutic (that is, medically effective) dose and a toxic one is surprisingly small. In adults the maximum safe dosage is four grams (eight 500-milligram tablets) over a 24-hour period. The toxic dose is a mere seven grams taken all at once.
You can make the margin even thinner by drinking too much and eating too little. I’ll spare you the biochemistry, but basically acetaminophen and alcohol in combination overwhelm the liver’s ability to remove toxins from your bloodstream. At the same time, starving yourself reduces the liver’s output of glutathione, a natural detoxicant produced in response to food.
kushiel
January 24, 2006, 3:35pm
27
After my father went to the doctor because of alcoholism, he was told to just not drink and his liver would slowly repair itself over a number of years - less than the 9 Kalhoun mentioned.