Drugs with anti-inflammatory effects can be divided into the following categories: 1. Antibiotics. 2. NSAID. 3. Glucocorticoid. People often say that anti-inflammatory drugs belong to antibiotics, so I mainly answer the side effects of antibiotics.
The side effects of eating too many antibiotics can be roughly divided into these categories.
Effect of 1. on intestinal flora of patients: There are many kinds of normal parasitic bacteria in human large intestine, which are balanced and restricted each other, so that their number and species remain stable. For example, before liberation, warlords balanced each other, but no one could eat anyone. Everyone checks and balances each other but lives together. Moreover, the bacteria in the intestine can also produce some substances that the human body cannot directly synthesize, such as vitamin K, which can be absorbed by the human body. So it doesn't mean that the bacteria parasitic on the human body must be bad. If patients take antibiotics orally for a long time, because antibiotics have antibacterial spectrum, such antibiotics will kill bacteria with corresponding antibacterial spectrum, which will lead to imbalance in the types and quantities of bacteria in the intestine and lead to intestinal inflammation. For example, chestnut: the side effect of clindamycin or azithromycin is pseudomembranous colitis, which is intestinal inflammation caused by imbalance of Clostridium difficile in the intestine.
2. Impact on the patient's body itself: Antibiotics will have a certain impact on the human body itself after entering the blood. Give a few chestnuts: Vancomycin sometimes causes histamine in patients, leading to red man syndrome; Macrolide drugs can enhance gastrointestinal peristalsis; Long-term use of quinolones can lead to tendinitis; Tetracyclines can cause teeth to turn yellow; Chloramphenicol can cause bone marrow suppression; Prohibition of multiple drugs in pregnant women will cause fetal malformation.
3. The screening of bacteria is the most noteworthy. Foreign doctors don't prescribe antibiotics easily, but the abuse of antibiotics in domestic hospitals is really outrageous. The discovery of superbugs in recent years is all because antibiotics in hospitals have slowly screened bacteria into highly drug-resistant bacteria. So eating too many antibiotics will lead to drug resistance of bacteria in the body. For example, if normal Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis in nasal cavity are resistant to antibiotics, it will be more difficult to treat patients with upper respiratory tract bacterial infections in the future. Ordinary antibiotics will not be able to kill bacteria, so we must use more advanced antibiotics to kill bacteria, and at the same time, it will lead to an increase in bacterial drug resistance, so a vicious circle. However, the types of antibiotics are limited, and the development of new drugs often takes billions or more years to put into clinical use. The production speed of new drugs is far behind the speed of bacterial resistance, so more and more drug-resistant bacteria will inevitably appear, which can resist all antibiotics. Once infected by such bacteria, patients can only wait for death, and there is no cure.