- Red Wine Protects Against Cancer? Maybe Not
- Weed Use During Pregnancy Triples Risk Of Behavioral Problems In Kids
- Concussion Damage Lingers In Athletes’ Brains Up To A Year
- Turning Off TV Better For Heart Health Of Folks Predisposed To Diabetes
- Pandemic Set Kindergarteners Back Developmentally
- OB/GYNs Walk Away From Anti-Abortion States
- Poll Reveals Only 17 Percent Think Medicaid Funding Should Be Cut
- Dozens Of Laid-Off CDC Workers Push To Get Their Jobs Back
- RFK Jr. Pushes for Stricter Oversight of Chemicals in Food
- USDA Disbands Two Key Food Safety Committees
FDA Advisers Revisit Heart Risks Posed by Painkillers

Naproxen — the key pain reliever in Aleve — seems safer for the heart than other popular anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen (Advil and Motrin), U.S. health officials say.
And it’s possible that labeling will soon reflect that finding.
Advisers to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration are meeting Monday and Tuesday to discuss cardiac risks associated with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, sometimes called NSAIDs.
Millions of people take these medicines, which also include the prescription drug Celebrex, to relieve muscle aches, headaches and pain from arthritis and injuries.
Since 2005, labeling laws have required a heart warning on these anti-inflammatory drugs. That stemmed from Merck’s withdrawal of the NSAID Vioxx from the market in 2004 because of a notable increased risk of heart attack among Vioxx users.
But naproxen doesn’t seem to carry the same risks as the other NSAIDs, an FDA panel recently concluded after a safety review involving 350,000 people using different pain relievers. The panel posted its findings online last week.
If the FDA does approve a labeling change, that could make Aleve and other naproxen-containing drugs the preferred drug for patients who have a risk of heart problems, Ira Loss, a pharmaceutical analyst with Washington Analysis, told the Associated Press. However, all NSAIDs will still need to warn of risks for internal bleeding and ulceration, Loss said.
The FDA isn’t required to follow its advisory panel’s recommendations, but it frequently does.
Aspirin, another type of NSAID, isn’t a focus of this week’s hearings.
More information
The American College of Rheumatology has more about pain relievers.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.