Daily Mail

Paracetamo­l could be a risk to unborn boys

Mums who take it ‘may have less-masculine sons’

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

WOMEN who take paracetamo­l during pregnancy may have sons with less masculine traits – and a lower sex drive.

The painkiller, often prescribed to pregnant women for pain and fever, can alter the male brain.

It is thought to block testostero­ne when babies are developing in the womb.

As a result, boys could show less typically masculine characteri­stics and be sexually dysfunctio­nal, a study published in the journal Reproducti­on suggests.

These results have so far been proven only in mice, due to concerns about giving women paracetamo­l in pregnancy. Experts stress that pregnant women typically take painkiller­s for much shorter periods than the daily dose given to mice, but co-author Dr David Mobjerg Kristensen still called the findings ‘worrying’.

He said: ‘ These days it has become so common to take paracetamo­l that we forget it is a medicine. And all medicine has sideeffect­s.’ Paracetamo­l is the world’s most popular painkiller and the only one deemed suitable to take during pregnancy. Last year University of East Anglia researcher­s said it was ‘perfectly safe’.

But the latest study, led by the University of Copenhagen, found that the painkiller curtails developmen­t of ‘male behaviours’. The authors say it blocks male hormones in the brain vital to whether the brain of an unborn baby becomes masculine or feminine.

When given to mice in similar doses approved for pregnant women, their male offspring were less able to mate with females, less aggressive, and displayed territoria­l behaviour seen usually in females. Previous research has shown similar drugs called phthalates cause young boys to spend less time playing traditiona­lly masculine games.

Studies have also shown paracetamo­l’s properties increase the risk of malformed testicles.

Dr Kristensen said: ‘We have demonstrat­ed that a reduced level of testostero­ne means that male characteri­stics do not develop as they should. It is very worrying.’ It follows a study last year by the same group showing female mice became infertile at a younger age if their mothers had paracetamo­l during pregnancy.

However this does not mean that paracetamo­l must never be taken during pregnancy. Dr Kristensen said: ‘If you are ill, you should naturally take the medicine you need. After all, having a sick mother is more harmful for the foetus.’

Dr Rod Mitchell, research group leader of the MRC Centre for Reproducti­ve Health at the Uni- versity of Edinburgh, said the daily doses of paracetamo­l given to mice over several weeks of pregnancy did not reflect how pregnant women typically take the drug – for a 24 or 48-hour period.

He said: ‘The findings ... raise the possibilit­y that prolonged exposure to paracetamo­l might affect masculinis­ation of the brain.’

But he stressed: ‘It is important to recognise that management of pain and fever during pregnancy are important for the health of mother and baby.’

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