<p>It's best to avoid them unless you routinely take them for a medical condition. Although the evidence is limited, some painkillers might interfere with the very thing the vaccine is trying to do: generate a strong immune system response.</p>.<p>Vaccines work by tricking the body into thinking it has a virus and mounting a defense against it. That may cause arm soreness, fever, headache, muscle aches or other temporary symptoms of inflammation that can be part of that reaction.</p>.<p>“These symptoms mean your immune system is revving up and the vaccine is working,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a recent news briefing.</p>.<p>Certain painkillers that target inflammation, including ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin and other brands) might curb the immune response. A study on mice in the Journal of Virology found these drugs might lower production of antibodies — helpful substances that block the virus from infecting cells.</p>.<p>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.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/turned-down-800-times-foreign-graduates-german-dream-shattered-as-covid-hits-jobs-947362.html" target="_blank">Read | Turned down 800 times: Foreign graduate's German dream shattered as Covid hits jobs</a></strong></p>.<p>People should not take a painkiller as a preventive measure before getting a vaccine unless a doctor has told them to, he said. The same goes for after a shot: “If you don't need to take it, you shouldn't,” Watanabe said.</p>.<p>If you do need one, acetaminophen (Tylenol) “is safer because it doesn't alter your immune response,” he added.</p>.<p>The CDC offers other tips, such as holding a cool, wet washcloth over the area of the shot and exercising that arm. For fever, drink lots of fluids and dress lightly.</p>.<p>Call your doctor if redness or tenderness in the arm increases after a day or if side effects don't go away after a few days, the CDC says.</p>
<p>It's best to avoid them unless you routinely take them for a medical condition. Although the evidence is limited, some painkillers might interfere with the very thing the vaccine is trying to do: generate a strong immune system response.</p>.<p>Vaccines work by tricking the body into thinking it has a virus and mounting a defense against it. That may cause arm soreness, fever, headache, muscle aches or other temporary symptoms of inflammation that can be part of that reaction.</p>.<p>“These symptoms mean your immune system is revving up and the vaccine is working,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a recent news briefing.</p>.<p>Certain painkillers that target inflammation, including ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin and other brands) might curb the immune response. A study on mice in the Journal of Virology found these drugs might lower production of antibodies — helpful substances that block the virus from infecting cells.</p>.<p>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.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/turned-down-800-times-foreign-graduates-german-dream-shattered-as-covid-hits-jobs-947362.html" target="_blank">Read | Turned down 800 times: Foreign graduate's German dream shattered as Covid hits jobs</a></strong></p>.<p>People should not take a painkiller as a preventive measure before getting a vaccine unless a doctor has told them to, he said. The same goes for after a shot: “If you don't need to take it, you shouldn't,” Watanabe said.</p>.<p>If you do need one, acetaminophen (Tylenol) “is safer because it doesn't alter your immune response,” he added.</p>.<p>The CDC offers other tips, such as holding a cool, wet washcloth over the area of the shot and exercising that arm. For fever, drink lots of fluids and dress lightly.</p>.<p>Call your doctor if redness or tenderness in the arm increases after a day or if side effects don't go away after a few days, the CDC says.</p>