Doctor Sounds Alarm On Popular Medication—Says It Could Cause Organ Failure

There’s a familiar bottle sitting in countless American medicine cabinets. It claims to soothe aches, help you fall asleep, and take the edge off long, restless nights. Its name is Tylenol PM. But according to one healthcare professional, those little blue pills deserve a second thought—especially when they’re used night after night.

Dr. Ethan Melillo, a pharmacist based in Rhode Island, doesn’t hold back. He’s openly said that Tylenol PM is one of the medications he strongly dislikes—an unusually blunt stance in medicine. His concern isn’t that the drug doesn’t work. It’s that people often misunderstand it, assuming it’s harmless simply because it’s familiar and sold over the counter.

Tylenol PM: A Risky Two-Ingredient Mix
Tylenol PM isn’t a single medication. It’s a combination of two drugs working together:

Acetaminophen, which reduces pain and fever

Diphenhydramine, an antihistamine that causes drowsiness

On the surface, it sounds convenient—relief from pain and help with sleep in one dose. But Dr. Melillo cautions that this convenience may hide real risks, particularly with frequent or long-term use.

Acetaminophen: Quietly Hard on the Liver
Acetaminophen—the same ingredient found in regular Tylenol—is one of the most widely used pain relievers in the U.S. It’s inexpensive, easy to find, and easier on the stomach than drugs like ibuprofen. However, it places a heavy burden on the liver.

When you take acetaminophen, your liver processes it. During that process, a small amount of a toxic byproduct called NAPQI is produced. Under normal circumstances, your body neutralizes this toxin using an antioxidant called glutathione, preventing harm.

The problem arises when that system is pushed too far—especially with repeated use, high doses, or mixing with alcohol—leaving the liver vulnerable.