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Should You Take Aspirin Every Day?
Painkiller Can Help Prevent Heart Attacks, Strokes
Pei Chieng, Contriubting writerAn aspirin a day keeps the heart attack away. Or does it?While scientists have proven aspirin's effectiveness in preventing heart attacks and strokes, recent studies have shown that the drug may not be as beneficial as it was once touted to be, and certain high-risk patients should avoid daily aspirin therapy completely.Aspirin is an anti-clotting agent. The drug helps to ward off a stroke or a heart attack by preventing the buildup of platelets that could cause a blood clot in the arteries. Doctors mainly recommend the cheap and effective drug as a blood-thinning medication.It has been proven to help prevent heart attacks and strokes. A study involving 95,000 patients with low to high risk of heart attacks and strokes showed that aspirin reduced non-fatal heart attacks by about 20 percent. Scientists at the University of Buffalo found that aspirin reduces the risk of a second heart attack in up to 80 percent of patients.However, the benefits of daily aspirin therapy is different between sexes and between age groups, particularly for women.For example, aspirin can help to prevent the incidence of a first stroke in women of all ages, but not for men. Also, while it reduces the risk of heart disease and prevents a second heart attack for both sexes, it doesn't prevent a first heart attack for women under the age of 65.If you are at high risk of experiencing a stroke or heart disease, the American Heart Association recommends starting daily aspirin therapy. However, as with any other medication, it is wise to first consult your doctor.If you suffer from asthma, stomach ulcers, heart failure or a bleeding or clotting disorder, then your doctor will likely discourage you from taking aspirin on a daily basis. Similarly, if you are regularly taking ibuprofen, or anticoagulants like warfarin, daily aspirin therapy is not for you.The benefits of taking aspirin are greatly reduced when taken together with ibuprofen and when taken together with anticoagulants, your chances of bleeding are significantly higher.






