Use of paracetamol in children aged under 15 months can double their chances of getting asthma, a new study has revealed.
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It found a dose-response affect, so the more regularly a child was using paracetamol the greater the risk appeared to be.
The study's author, Professor Julian Crane, said he was unable to determine how much paracetamol a child would have to take before becoming more suspectable to asthma or allergies.
"It's difficult to say, it's over a period rather than any absolute (amount). But we did find a sort of dose-response affect, so the more regularly a child was using it the greater the risk appeared to be," the Courier Mail quoted him as saying.
However, it was not a case of taking the medication once and immediately become more susceptible, he said.
"It's clearly more subtle, you don't take it and suddenly get wheezy.
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Source-ANI