How do pain relieving pills like advil relieve pain?

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Ibuprofen, the active ingredient in Advil, is classified as a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) that reduces pain primarily by inhibiting the formation of prostaglandins, which are compounds involved in inflammation and pain signaling. This mechanism suggests that ibuprofen can effectively alleviate pain associated with inflammation, such as muscular aches or swelling from injuries. For instance, after a physical injury like a punch, the pain experienced later is often due to swelling caused by the body's inflammatory response. While ibuprofen can help reduce the longer-lasting pain from injuries, it does not function as an anesthetic and will not eliminate sharp, immediate pain, such as that from a cut. Instead, it may lessen the persistent ache that follows. The discussion emphasizes the distinction between analgesics, which relieve pain, and anesthetics, which block sensation entirely. Users are encouraged to seek additional information online to deepen their understanding of pain relief mechanisms and the differences between various types of medications.
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On the part of the label where it lists the active ingredients in Advil, it says "Ibuprofen". And it says that ibuprofen is a "non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug." This makes me think that ibuprofen reduces pain by reducing/preventing inflammation (swelling) somehow. I can see how that would work for a muscular ache. One time someone punched me in the back, and it did not hurt right when they punched me. But a few hours later I was in agony. This made me think that it wasn't the force of the blow per se that caused my pain. It was the swelling as a result of the blow that caused me pain. The swelling was caused by white blood cells rushing to the area to repair the damage.

Is my supposition that Advil works by reducing/preventing swelling correct?

Would Advil reduce the pain from a cut? Say if someone cut their finger accidentally on a saw, would advil reduce the pain from the cut?
 
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Ibuprofen inhibits the formation of prostaglandin - it should have some effect on the "achey" type pain from physical injury. It is not an anaesthetic, so you still get the sharp pains... i.e. you cut your finger, you'll feel the initial pain, but the longer-lasting pain should be reduced depending on how much you took.

refs:
http://www.sharecare.com/health/nonsteroidal-anti-inflammatory-drugs/how-ibuprofen-relieve-pain
http://www.webmd.com/drug-medication/otc-pain-relief-10/pain-relievers-nsaids

Google is your friend here.
 
Is aspirin an anesthetic?
 
No aspirin works by inhibiting cyclooxygenase which is required for the formation of prostaglandins, as Simon mentioned above. Just to re-iterate, Google really is your friend here. There is a ton of information out there about NSAIDs.

Anesthetics typically have -caine endings in there names (lidocaine, procaine etc) as they are derivatives or tweaked versions of cocaine, which is itself a local anesthetic.
 
Yeah, part of the appeal of cocain is that it provides a (usually temporary) end to the heartache, and the thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to.

Anyway - the way to tell the difference between an anaesthetic and an analgesic is to see if it stops you from feeling it when you prick your finger. Analesics, like asperin, paracetamol, ibuprofin, all releive pain - while anaesthetics like novocain, remove or deaden all sensation.

But please - this is also something you can google very easily.
The way to get the best out of sites like this one is to go look up the facts and definitions you seek then ask about the bits you don't understand.
 
Pain relievers work in one of two ways, they either block receptors in the brain, or messenger transmission from the source. There is no alternative.
 
Popular article referring to the BA.2 variant: Popular article: (many words, little data) https://www.cnn.com/2022/02/17/health/ba-2-covid-severity/index.html Preprint article referring to the BA.2 variant: Preprint article: (At 52 pages, too many words!) https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.02.14.480335v1.full.pdf [edited 1hr. after posting: Added preprint Abstract] Cheers, Tom

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