If you’ve got a jar of Tylenol Arthritis pain caplets in your dresser, you might want to check and make sure your bottle isn’t covered under the newly expanded Tylenol recall. Apparently, several lots of Tylenol with the red EZ-Open caps were contaminated with a fungicide (2,4,6-tribromophenol) used to treat the wood pallets the product’s packaging materials were stored on. The result of the contamination is a moldy-smelling Tylenol that gives the takers stomach complaints.
While it is certainly more serious than Toyota’s fatal floor mats, it’s nice to know that McNeil PPC is getting out ahead of the issue by having the voluntary recalls. It’s also reassuring to know that, at least in the short term, tribromoanisole is effectively harmless. After Tylenol’s famous poisoning incidents in Chicago in the early 80’s, I’d imagine they’re very proactive about the safety of their pills and capsules.
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Tags: drug recall, Tylenol, Tylenol recalled, Tylenol Arthritis Pain Caplet, McNeil PPC Inc., moldy-smelling Tylenol, Tylenol contaminated with fungicide, 2, 4, 6-tribromoanisole