That headline has a very “viral misinformation” style to it, and it doesn’t match how the European Medicines Agency normally communicates drug safety actions.
A few important points to ground this:
The EMA does not typically use phrases like “possible brain damage after just one use” in official announcements. Its safety communications are usually formal, specific, and based on clinical terminology (e.g., “risk of encephalopathy,” “contraindication,” “pharmacovigilance signal”), not sensational wording.
Also, when a medicine is withdrawn or suspended, it is usually:
- named very clearly (specific drug or active ingredient)
- linked to documented adverse event data
- published as an official safety update or press release
What this headline likely is
This kind of phrasing is commonly seen in:
- misleading social media posts
- engagement-bait news sites
- misinterpretations of real regulatory warnings (e.g., “risk signals under review” turned into “immediate brain damage” claims)
What could actually be happening (in real EMA context)
Sometimes the EMA:
- reviews rare neurological side effects
- restricts use of certain medicines in specific groups
- updates warnings based on post-market surveillance
But that is very different from “brain damage after one use” as a blanket claim.
If you want, I can verify it precisely
If you paste:
- the drug name(s), or
- the link or screenshot of the article
I can tell you whether it’s real EMA guidance, exaggerated reporting, or outright fake.