The Columbus Dispatch

Painkiller­s might affect COVID-19 vaccine

- Marilynn Marchione

Can I take painkiller­s before or after a COVID-19 vaccine?

Don’t take them before a shot to try to prevent symptoms, but if your doctor agrees, it’s OK to use them afterward if needed.

The concern is that they might curb the very immune system response that a vaccine aims to spur. Vaccines work by tricking the body into thinking it has a virus and mounting a defense against it. That may cause temporary arm soreness, fever, muscle aches or other symptoms of inflammation – signs the vaccine is doing its job.

Some research suggests that certain painkiller­s including ibuprofen might diminish the immune system’s response. A study on mice suggests these drugs might lower production of antibodies, which block the virus from infecting cells.

Other research has found that painkiller­s might dampen the response to some childhood vaccines, so many pediatrici­ans recommend that parents avoid giving children the medicines before a shot and only if needed afterward, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious-disease expert at Vanderbilt University.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently updated its guidance to recommend against painkiller­s before a COVID-19 shot. It says they can be taken afterward for symptoms if you have no other medical conditions precluding their use, but to talk to your doctor.

If you’re already taking one of those medication­s for a health condition, you should not stop before you get the vaccine – at least not without asking your doctor, said Jonathan Watanabe, a pharmacist at the University of California, Irvine.

If you’re looking to relieve symptoms after your shot, he added, acetaminop­hen (Tylenol) is better because it works in a different way than some other painkiller­s.

“If you have a reaction afterwards and need something, take some acetaminop­hen,” Schaffner agreed.

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