That’s a serious claim, but it’s missing key context—especially which drug you’re referring to.
As written, it’s not something that can be treated as a general fact. The European Medicines Agency (EMA) does issue warnings, safety reviews, and occasional recalls, but:
- It does not typically state that “brain damage is possible after a single dose” in broad terms
- And it does not usually order blanket “immediate recall of drugs” without specifying a particular medicine and risk profile
So this sounds like it may be:
- A misquote
- A misunderstanding of a safety alert
- Or a claim taken out of context from a specific medication warning
Important clarification
Whether brain-related side effects are possible depends entirely on the specific drug, dose, patient condition, and evidence from clinical reports.
Some medications can rarely cause serious neurological side effects, but that is always:
- Drug-specific
- Dose-specific
- And clearly documented in official EMA safety communications
If you want a precise answer
Tell me:
- The name of the drug
- Or paste the full article / link / screenshot text
I can then explain exactly what the EMA said and whether the claim is accurate or misleading.