Shocking but true – this common OTC remedy lowers penile sensitivity

And you probably have it in your medicine cabinet right now…

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Story-At-a-Glance

Matt Cook here, and this is quite shocking…

A super common over-the-counter treatment that you can buy anywhere…

Target, Walgreens, Publix, Amazon, 7-11… all of them carry it…

It’s actually REDUCING the amount of pleasure men feel.

It’s ruining a man’s pleasure sensors and messing with his manly hormones every time he takes it…

And most men have it in their medicine cabinet right now…

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Shocking but true – this common OTC remedy lowers penile sensitivity

Painkillers like acetaminophen have been available over the counter for decades.

Most people assume that they are relatively harmless aside from some risk of overdose if you take a large amount.

But the truth is that acetaminophen and many similar treatments have a very long list of serious side effects.

In recent years we have found that acetaminophen can affect empathy – the ability to understand and act upon someone else’s emotional state.

It can have huge implications for personal and social lives.

Rodent experiments show that animals given acetaminophen were much slower to save other animals from seeming death.

The treatment alters the levels of a number of hormones in the brain which are associated with empathy.

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The animal experiments were performed at Dokuz Eylul University, School of Medicine in Izmir, Turkey. The paper was published in Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior.

“Empathy is the ability to recognize, process and respond to another’s emotional state.”

Empathy is not something that stands on its own – it’s linked to many other emotional as well as intellectual abilities.

“Empathic functions have been linked with a multitude of cognitive and affective processes.”

People with lower levels of empathy are more likely to be more aggressive…

Less able to control the aggression and more likely to end up in trouble with the law.

“Impaired empathy has been linked to aggression and criminal behavior in society.”

The authors of this study want to learn more about recent evidence implicating acetaminophen in decreased empathy.

They carried out a number of experiments in rats.

“We investigated the effects of acetaminophen on empathy-like behavior in Sprague Dawley rats, and we further explored the underlying mechanisms by analyzing empathy related neurohormones, e.g. oxytocin and vasopressin.”

Psychologists and zoologists categorize a number of different types of empathy.

There is a more primitive form of emotional empathy which animals have…

And a more advanced form which may be limited to humans and perhaps a very small number of other animals.

“Cognitive empathy includes cognitive processes such as glance and altruistic behavior. Emotional empathy is observed in animals, whereas cognitive empathy is more apparent in humans, primates and rodents.”

The researchers gave different groups of rodents different doses of acetaminophen and then tested their empathic behaviors half an hour later.

The research found clear evidence that acetaminophen reduced empathy in the animals.

“Empathy-like behavior was reduced with a single high dose of acetaminophen.”

Both high doses and later lower doses of acetaminophen reduced empathic behavior.

“Subsequent low dose administration of acetaminophen also reduced empathy-like behavior.”

The researchers also discovered that there were alterations to brain hormones…

Hormones which have been shown to be linked to empathy after the rats were given the treatment.

“In this study we also showed that acetaminophen decreased oxytocin and vasopressin levels in the prefrontal cortex and amygdala”.

You may be wondering how researchers would go about testing empathic behaviors in rodents – I know I was.

They set up two boxes right beside each other.

One rat is placed in each box, and the wall between the boxes is clear so that the rodents can see each other.

In one of the boxes one of the rodents is placed in a troubling amount of water.

The other rodent has the ability to open a doorway into its box which would save the other rat.

Some rats figure out how to open the door – others don’t.

And so the researchers have to test individual rats many times to make sure that they do understand how to open the door and save their fellow rat.

Rats who consistently opened the safety door within a set short period of time were included in the final study.

Only those rats who had proven they could learn this ability were put through the acetaminophen experiment.

When the animals were given the treatment they took much longer to open the safety door. 

They seemed to care less or be less able to understand the problem the other rat was experiencing.

The research also showed changes in the levels of those brain hormones were tied to delays in opening the safety door to save the other rat.

There are now numerous human and animal studies which show that acetaminophen can lower empathy…

And, acetaminophen lowers penile sensitivity and reduces the good feelings from oxytocin.

No bueno.

This OTC “remedy” can have major effects on your behavior and your social life — and your love life. ACK!

—-Important Message For Men Taking OTC Pain Relievers—-

Better than opioids… safer than Tylenol?

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Matt Cook is editor-in-chief of Daily Medical Discoveries. Matt has been a full time health researcher for 26 years. ABC News interviewed Matt on sexual health issues not long ago. Matt is widely quoted on over 1,000,000 websites. He has over 300,000 daily newsletter readers. Daily Medical Discoveries finds hidden, buried or ignored medical studies through the lens of 100 years of proven science. Matt heads up the editorial team of scientists and health researchers. Each discovery is based upon primary studies from peer reviewed science sources following the Daily Medical Discoveries 7 Step Process to ensure accuracy.
Acetaminophen (paracetamol) affects empathy-like behavior in rats: Dose-response relationshiphttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30359628/